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FIRST RECORD OF THE CLASS 
OF NINETEEN HUNDRED SIX 
OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 



Edited by the Class Secretary 




It 






1907 






Printed by 
Princeton University Press 



Class Organization 

SAMUEL JACKSON REID, JR., President. 

WILLIAM CALHOUN MOTTER, Vice-President. 

LOUIS DANIEL FROELICK, Secretary. 

OLIVER DE GRAY VANDERBILT, JR. Acting Secretary. 

Memorial Committee. 

HARRY FERDINAND BLISS, 

LOUIS DANIEL FROELICK, 

PAUL STARK SEELEY, 

OLIVER DE GRAY VANDERBILT, JR., 

SINGLETON HINMAN BIRD, Chairman. 

Reunion Committee. 

HARRISON WILLIAM AMBROSE, 

SINGLETON HINMAN BIRD, 

LOUIS DANIEL FROELICK, 

EDGAR ALEXANDER ILL, 

BENJAMIN WARFIELD KERR, 

GORDON MACDONALD, JR., 

HAROLD R. MIXSELL, 

OLIVER DE GRAY VANDERBILT, JR., 

SAMUEL JACKSON REID, JR., Chairman. 

Representative on the Committee of Fifty. 
OLIVER DE GRAY VANDERBILT, JR., 1906. 



Preface 



IN presenting this book to the class under my name I feel that I 
must give some explanation of its origin, knowing as I do what 
small part I have taken in its contents. 

Lou Froelick has practically done it all, and yet he persists in thank- 
ing me in every letter I get from him, for simply doing the clerical 
work of compiling the statistics which he has collected through his 
year of conscientious work as secretary. 

I wish to thank Bill Hoyt for the interest which he has taken in 
getting up the cover, also the fellows who have written letters and thus 
helped to make the book more interesting. 

I am afraid that none of us realize how much it means to the class, 
to have a man like Lou at the helm. He has everyone of us constantly 
in mind, and the days and months he has spent in the interest of the 
class would make us realize this, if we but knew them. 

As Lou says in an other part of the record, this class is certainly a 
pleasure to work for, and I indeed appreciate the confidence which Sam 
and Lou have put in me in asking me to take up the work of the sec- 
retary in Lou's absence. I know nothing more delightful that I could 
wish for. Every letter I received from any of the class is read and 
reread with keenest enjoyment, and as I sit down to look over the 
records before putting them in the printer's hands, it is like taking up 
some precious old book full of the dearest memories, and I sit back and 
dream visions of those wonderful care free days, when we were 
altogether in Princeton. 

They are over now but their memory is as fresh as ever and grows 
sweeter every year. Let each one of us keep all the others constantly in 
mind, and let me know, as often as you have a few minutes to write, 
everything about yourself, remembering what pleasure it will give to 
the other men in the class, scattered completely around the earth, to 
hear the interesting news of the best and dearest friends they can ever 
hope to have. 

And if any of you have a few dull or down cast moments drop me 
a line and I will tell you all the good news of your friends, and how 
each man is proving that he is proud to be a member of the class. 

Lou says that you have all been a big help to him in his work in 
answering his letters and circulars, although some had to be coaxed a 



bit. I do not mind coaxing, but I will be disappointed if I do not hear 
from you all frequently. I feel however that I am not to expect any 
disappointments. 

In many ways 1906 has already established for itself a place among 
the most prominent classes. The first annual dinner and reunion, 
which Lou has so ably described in another part, were successful to the 
last degree. The memorial fund which has been so well managed by 
Hinman Bird is remarkable for its size, and the way the class has con- 
tributed as a whole. The reunion committee has covered itself with 
glory in its successful management. It ends its first year without a debt 
and we certainly owe our thanks to the members of the committee for 
the time which they have given up to make our gatherings a success. 

With this start, 1906 is well launched, and we can now rest assured 
that a bright and successful path stretches out to us. We are now 
held together by a bond which can never be broken, and which, I am 
sure, will grow stronger and draw us closer as the years go by. Let 
each one of us recognize the responsibility which he has for the class 
and wherever we are, or whatever we undertake or are tempted to do, 
remember your friends in the class, and that your every act reflects on 
them. 

O. DeG. Vanderbilt, Jr. 



Letter from Louis D. Froelick 

Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 6, 1907. 
To the Class of 1906: 

I feel that an apology would be due to the class from me for my 
action in leaving the work of the class secretary by going to China 
for two years, were it not that the affairs of the class are now in more 
competent hands than they would have been otherwise. Shave Vander- 
bilt has been appointed by Sam Reid to take up the work for the two 
year period and has most kindly consented to accept the responsibility. 
I am indebted to you for your hearty support during the last year and 
for your active response to requests and circulars. True it is that 
1906 must be a busy crowd, for almost all of you worthy members 
seemed to be so deep in the furore of business and pre-professional 
life, that anything in the line of auto-biographies or even a few written 
chuckles of your usual wit and humor for publication as letters in the 
first Class Record, were exceedingly scarce. I trust that you will give 
Shave as ready support, lend him as prompt attention and response, 
but develop a much greater readiness than has been noticeable to give 
up a few genial facts or fictions about yourselves in a personal letter 
to him once in a while. Remember that the Triennial Record is a bound 
volume of good size, just filled with interesting letters from every one 
of us. Keep in mind this chance to make a stir in journalism and work 
out your ideas on paper every once in a while to send to Shave. Let 
us sit down promptly and answer every request he makes, remembering 
that he is just beginning his work when he has done about 350 times 
the amount of work you'll do in reply. It is a great joy to do the 
secretary's work for a lively responsive class. Let us make Shave's 
joy unbounded. Thanking you all for the honor of the position you 
have given me, for your support and your present indulgence and 
with best wishes to you all, I am. 

Sincerely yours, 

Louis D. Froemck. 



The Class Memorial Fund 

New York, Nov. i, 1907. 

Lou Froelick has told you what a lot of money he and Sam Reid 
spent last June and the wonderful first reunion we had, that I feel in 
duty bound to turn your minds from reflecting on those forty-eight 
half barrels of beer we consumed, into more serious channels. Though 
naturally a most modest man, still by justice to the other members of 
this committee and by Froelick's appeal to tell about our "good work 
in collecting money," as he termed it, I am impelled to let forth a few 
pent up words on the subject of the Class Memorial. Money is a partic- 
ularly hard thing to gather, an easy thing to ask for, and difficult to 
receive. 

In Senior year soon after we five unfortunates were elected, we 
started to see every member of the class and get each to sign a pledge 
card, agreeing to give so much a year on or before February ist in each 
year for ten years. Of course you remember being "approached" and 
most everybody was "out" — out of their rooms and out of money. 
"Beggars must not be choosers" and finally we succeeded obtaining 
252 names, the total sum promised a year being $2,150.00, an average 
per man of approximately $8.50. Considering we graduated only 265, 
including some who preferred to graduate in February 1907, this was 
doing very well — in promises. 

We started a card index, sent many letters and notices — and then 
more notices — and on June ist the class had in the fund $1,654.50. At 
the present time with accumulated interest this sum is a few dollars 
short of $1,700. Our statistics show that only 171 men paid their 
subscriptions out of the total of 252, leaving eighty-one men who did 
not pay. This is a very poor showing but it is difficult to collect money 
by writing letters and notices which is our only way. The generosity 
of two or three men enabled us to report a total now of $1,700, an 
average of about $10 per man. Before we start the arduous work of 
collecting the 1908 subscriptions, we hope to get many of the eighty- 
one unpaid to send us their remittances. If any of the readers are in 
this class, listen to the wee small voice of conscience and send me a 
check, money order or cash. 

We must do better this second year or we will be unable to meet 



our obligations and have a 1906 Class Entry in the new Hall soon to be 
started. Our earning capacity has no doubt increased and I cannot 
urge you too strongly to contribute. We will be the youngest class to 
have an entry, it will be completed before our Fifth Reunion, and while 
our extreme youth is a handicap, success will be all the more praise- 
worthy. We have to make a payment of $4,000 this May to the 
Treasurer of the University, and $2,000 a year thereafter, to secure our 
entry, until the total $17,000 is paid. The University jfinances the under- 
taking, but we must live up to our contract. Not only will an entry 
be a splendid memorial to our class but it will be a fitting gift to 
Princeton of which we are so proud. If the class will co-operate with 
the Memorial Committee, each one doing his share, we shall be able 
to raise the $2,300 necessary this year. The Reunion in June was a 
success financially and the chairman expects that same class loyalty to 
support the Memorial Fund. 

S. HiNMAN Bird, 

Chairman of the Memorial Committee. 
2 West Forty-eighth Street. 



NOTE BY THE SECRETARY 

The work of the Class Memorial Committee centered principally in 
its chairman, Hinman Bird, ably assisted by the committee. It is 
owing to the steady efforts of these men and to the splendid response 
by the class, that we have reached the high-water mark in memorial 
funds for the first year. 

But it is to the greater glory of 1906 that this amount represents 
nearly equal contributions by every member of the class. No one 
man giving any large amount, much in excess of the general average; 
thus showing what class spirit and concentrated effort by every man 
in the class can do. 

It is a mark of energetic management, well backed up and bids fair 
to be the start of a fund which will be everlasting credit to the class. 

O. DeG. Vanderbilt, Jr. 



Financial Report of First Reunion 

The report of receipts, disbursements, and balance follows : 

RECEIPTS. 

Class Dinner in February, 1907 $7-05 

Subscriptions 1,647.52 

Total $1,654-57 

DISBURSEMENTS. 

Lot and Barn 100.00 

Tent 65.00 

Lumber and Carpentering 215.00 

Lighting and Installation 53-75 

Sawdust 16.40 

Music 306.00 

Refreshments 214.35 

Waiters 125.00 

Costumes 353-00 

Printing and Stationery 51.05 

Parade Equipment 60.25 

Committee Expenses 20.00 

Expressage 26.12 

Long Distance Traveller's Cup 16.00 

Incidentals 30.92 

Total $1,652.84 

Balance 1.73 

Retrospection on the important events pertaining to the Class of 
1906, during the commencement of June, 1907, reveals both success 
and failure. No two minds coincide on these two results, for that 
which is success to one is failure to another. Various conclusions 
upon the Reunion, all dependent upon the view-point may be arrived 



10 



at, yet in many respects the opinion must be unanimous. A large part 
of the class returned to Princeton, which is indicative of a lively 
interest and spirit; contributions were speedily and liberally given, a 
most emphatic signification of co-operation ; and the whole class mingled 
and communed with each other and proved that a year's separation 
only bound the men closer together, an unmistakable proof of a 
successful Reunion. 

On the other hand, failure, mightily overbalanced however by the 
successes, was not entirely obviated. It was the constant endeavor of 
the Reunion Committe, realizing the invariable popularity of the first 
year tent, to maintain an hospitable board and yet to restrain and keep 
down the number of guests to such an extent that the members of 
the class might conveniently get together. In this lies our only short- 
coming. The great number of graduates and undergraduates, besieging 
our quarters, caused the segregation of the 1906 men and our hospitality 
genuine to the core however, proved a slight distraction. It is a well- 
known fact that these conditions are always the same at first year 
reunions. 

The headquarters at 194 Nassau Street were well situated for a first 
reunion; the tent was complete in every respect; the floor, tables, and 
benches were kept clean; and the service of refreshments was 
splendid. The music was excellent and the uniforms, while absolutely 
unoriginal were durable, strong and serviceable. 

There were present at the reunion some one hundred and eighty men, 
many of whom remained in town from Friday until Tuesday morning — 
the period during which the tent was open. Contributions, ranging 
from two dollars to forty were received and it is especially a source 
of self gratification to the members of the class that a large percentage 
responded with enthusiasm in accordance with their means. The 
reunion was an expensive one, lacking in nothing that could contribute 
to the convenience and enjoyment of the class and it gives the 
Reunion Committee great pleasure to report that all the expenses of the 
reunion have been wholly paid. 



NOTE BY THE SECRETARY 
I feel that I cannot print the above report of the Reunion Committee 
without a word regarding the conscientious manner in which the 
whole thing has been managed. The detail of the class dinner, which 
was managed by Hinman Bird, were delightful to the last degree. 
Hinman spent a lot of work on this and deserves the thanks and 
appreciation of everyone, and we were certainly all disappointed not 
to have him with us. 



Can any one who was at the reunion say it was not a success ? Even 
the men in other classes are still talking of the 1906 tent. But few of 
us realize the amount of work necessary to make these three days 
at Princeton the best of the year. The comm'ttee certainly deserves 
the unstinted praise and thanks of the class. There was not a hitch, 
and many new features were introduced which made our reunion the 
feature of commencement, and the best first reunion which has ever 
been held in Princeton. Sam Reid as chairman worked day and night 
and was in danger of being flunked out of the law school. With such 
able assistants as Ed 111 and Harold Mixsell, who built the big ship, 
Harry Ambrose, who as usual supplied music(?) Benny Kerr, who 
helped put up the big tent (and never left it), and Hinman Bird, who 
nearly made us run short of beer, the plans reached the highest stage 
of development. I know everyone appreciates deeply the time these 
men gave up, and wishes to thank them for the best three days since 
we graduated. 

O. DeG. Vanderbilt. Jr. 



12 



List of Members 

The first address following the name is the man's permanent address, 
whence it is probable that mail will be forwarded to him. The next 
address, is the man's present residence: 

WOODBURY ABBEY, 
Northport, L. I. 

Surveyor with United States Engineering Corps, 39 
Whitehall St.., New York City. 

ALFRED HOUGHTON ABBOTT, 
227 Cedar St., Coming, N. Y. 
Wellesley, Mass. 

Assistant order clerk with Estabrook & Co., Bankers, 
15 State St., Boston, Mass. 

FREDERIC STACEY ACKLEY, 

Care A. N. Cox, 100 John St., New York City. 
Box 116, Millington, N. J. 

Occupation not settled. 

LE BARON ADAMS, 

Wichita Falls, Texas. 

Half owner, J. P. Bryan Land Co., Real Estate, Wich- 
ita Falls, Texas. 

JOHN PERCY COLEMAN ALDEN, 
Cornwall, Pa. 

Was at Princeton, in the Class of 1907, last year. Will 
travel for a year and then study law at University of 
Pennsylvania. 

13 



JAMES ADDISON McMILLAN ALEXANDER, 
850 Jefferson St., Jackson, Miss. 

Law Student, University of Mississippi, Jackson, Miss., 
and in the firm of Alexander & Alexander, Jackson, 
Miss. 

CHARLES ARTHUR AMBROSE, 
265 Centre St., Orange, N. J. 

In cashier's department, Moffat & White, Bankers, 5 
Nassau St., New York City. 

HARRISON WILLIAM AMBROSE, 
265 Centre St., Orange, N. J. 

With the American Book Co., 100 Washington Square, 
New York City. 

WILLIAM HEEBNER ANDERS, JR., 
R. F. D. No. 1, Lansdale, Pa. 

Farming. 

JOHN BOUKER ANDERSON, 

45 Greene Ave., Madison, N. J. 

Secretary of the Bouker Contracting Co., 24 State St., 
New York City. 

GRAY ARCHER, 

Chapel Hill, N. C. 

Teaching at High Point, N. C. 

WYNN ARMSTRONG, 

432 Linden St., Camden, N. J. 
Cambridge, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Law School. Studied one-half year 
in his father's office, E. A. Armstrong, Box 315, 
Camden, N. J. 

14 



^ 



THOMAS HENRY ATHERTON, JR., 
Wilkesbarre, Pa. 
6 Louisburg Sq., Boston. 

Student of Architecture, Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology, Boston, Mass. 

CHARLES WILLIAM GREVEL BAITER, 
6 St. Nicholas Place, New York City. 
27 Pine St., New York City. 

Student, the New York Law School. 

ALBERT THEODORE BAKER, 

159 Paxton St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

First helper, open hearth, Pennsylvania Steel Co., Har- 
risburg, Pa. 

JULIUS PRATT BALMER, 

1327 Hollsrw^ood Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Western representative in the advertising department 
of the Butterick Publishing Co., 1433 First National 
Bank Building, Chicago, 111. 

JOHN BERNARD BANNIGAN, 

244 Angell St., Providence, R. I. 

In the real estate business for himself at 75 Westmin- 
ster St., Providence, R. I. 

ALEXANDER WILLIAM BANNWART, 
418 Walker St., Lowell, Mass. 
42 Wendell*St., Cambridge, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Law School. 

RALPH AUSTIN BARD, 

140 Lake St., Chicago, Ills. 
Rosebud, Nevada. 

President of the Rosebud Mining and Leasing Co., 
Rosebud, Nev. 

15 



KENNETH BIGHAM BARNES, 
Gettysburg, Pa. 
San Rafael, Gal. 

Principal of the Junior School, Mt. Tamalpais Mili- 
tary Academy, San Rafael, Cal. 

ROBERT IRVING BARR, 

70 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J. 

Clerk with Schmidt & Gallatin, Bankers and Brokers, 
III Broadway, New York City. 

RALPH ANDREW BARRY, 
Jamestown, N. Y. 

Civil engineer with the N. Y. C. & H. R. R., 335 
Madison Ave., New York City. Was an instructor 
in the C. E. department at Princeton for a year. 

MOREY CUTLER BARTHOLOMEW, 
254 Connecticut St., Buffalo, N. Y. 

Studying law in the office of Bartholomew & Barthol- 
omew, Lawyers, 11 06 Prudential Building, Buffalo, 

N. Y. 

HOWARD PRESTON BARTRAM, 
67 Washington St., Newark, N. J. 

Special representative for the American Lawn Tennis 
Magazine. He plays tennis, and photographs and 
reports for this magazine. The Nezvark Evening 
News, and other papers. 

HARRY OGDEN BATES, JR., 

Madison Ave., Morristown, N. J. 

Writes that he is "gaining slowly but surely" from the 
paralysis which resulted from his accident in the 
Brokaw tank. May, 1905. 

16 



JULIAN BONAR BEATY, 
Georgetown, S. C. 
Care Job E. Hedges, 141 Broadway, New York City. 

Studying law at the New York Law School, and law 
clerk with Job E. Hedges, Attorney. 

DONALD WELDON BELL, 

130 Kennedy St., Bradford, Pa. 

With the Custer Coupling Co., No. 2 Oil Exchange, 
Bradford, Pa. 

GEORGE N. BERGNER, 

3 South Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. 
504 Bergner Building, Harrisburg, Pa. 

Business — "None." 

FRANK ALLEN BERRY, 

123 Ninth Ave., S, Nashville, Tenn. 
406 Craigie Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Law School. 

SINGLETON HINMAN BIRD, 

41 East Thirty-eighth St., New York City. 

In the bond department, Fisk & Robinson, Bankers and 
Brokers, 35 Cedar St., New York City. 

ALFRED LAWRENCE BLACK, JR., 
Bellingham, Wash. 

Studying law in the office of Black, Kindall & Kenyon, 
Bellingham, Wash. 

HARRY FERDINAND BLISS, 

l|Madison Ave., Newark, N. J. 

With Cassell & Co., Publishers, 43 East 19th St., New 
York City. 

17 



1 



NORRIS HARKNESS BOKUM, 

1616 Marquette Building, Chicago, III. 
609 East Division St. Chicago, III. 

Agent for the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co., Mar- 
quette Building, Chicago. 

HARRY VARY BONNER, 

Orwell, N. Y. 
LaFayette, N. Y. 

Preaching in the Lafayette Presbyterian Church. 
Married on August 15, 1906, Miss Bessie Laney, at 
Altenar, N. Y. 

EDWARD WILD BRADFORD, 
Mill Brook, Mass. 
19 College St., Providence, R. I. 

Studying law in the office of Page, Page & Cushing, 19 
College St., Providence, R. I. 

JOHN ALFRED BRADLEY, 

4020 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

With the Sterling Coal Co., mining and shipping of 
soft coal, 421 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. 

JAMES CAMPBELL BRANDON, 
205 North Main St., Butler, Pa. 
27 Winthrop Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Law School. 

PHILIP MARSTON BRASHER, 

215 Montague St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
478 Willoughby Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Manager of Woodside Heights Land Corporation, 
Terminal Heights, L. L Recuperating from foot- 
ball injuries and not working, summer of 1907. 

18 



FRANCIS MARK BROOKE, 
Haverford, Pa. 

In the bond business with H. W. Noble, Banking and 
Bonds, Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Married on June ii, 1907, Miss Nanna Sturges, of 
Scranton, Pa. 

JOHN NIXON BROOKS, 

240 West State St., Trenton, N. J. 
Technology Chambers, Boston, Mass. 

Studying civil engineering at the Massachusetts Insti- 
tute of Technology, Boston, Mass. 

ARCHER HITCHCOCK BROWN, 

56 Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. 
Catasauqua, Pa. 

With Empire Steel and Iron Co., Catasauqua, Pa. 

BRUCE WHITING BROWN, 
Glendale, Ohio. 

Reporter on The Times Democrat, New Orleans, La. 

LEIGHTON EDMUND BROWN, 

120 West Seventy-second St., New York City. 

No replies. 

GEORGE GILBERT BROWN, 
130 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 
Short Hills, N. J. 

Draughtsman with George Brown & Co., Cut Stone 
Contractors, 270 Passaic St., Newark, N. J. 

HORACE BROWN, 

2104 North Charles St., Baltimore, Md. 

In the banking department of the Baltimore Trust and 
Guarantee Co., Equitable Building, Baltimore, Md. 

19 



FREDERICK SMITH BROWNLEE, 
Port Gibson, Miss. 
Hally, Col. 

Telephone manager in the Colorado Telephone Co. 
Hally, Col. 

WALTER BRUNSWICK, 

43 St. Nicholas Place, New York City. 

Civil engineer assistant to the Assistant Engineer of 
the West Shore R. R., Room 12, West Shore R. R. 
Station, Weehawken, N. J. 

CHARLES CARROLL BURLEIGH, 

210 East Maple Ave., Merchantville, N. J. 

Collector and inspector with the J. J. Burleigh Corpor- 
ations — Water Companies, Collections, Real Estate, 
432 Market St., Camden, N. J. 

GRANVILLE LINDSAY BURTON, 

Care Crutchen & Starks, Louisville, Ky. 

Traveling salesman for the Deimel Linen Mesh Under- 
wear Co., 49 Broadway, New York City. 

Married Miss Dorothy B. Husted, Dec. 28, 1907, at 
Winthrop Highlands, Mass. 

ETHAN FLAGG BUTLER, 

1535 "I" St., Washington, D. C. 

Johns Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore, Md. 

Medical student at Johns Hopkins. 

HERBERT FULTON BYRAM, 

7614 Penn. Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 
Ketchum, Idaho. 

Superintendent of the Dollar Hide Mining Co., Ket- 
chum, Idaho. 

20 



EDWIN ELLIOTS CALVERLEY, 

2233 North Camac St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
44 Alexander Hall, Princeton Theological Seminary, 
Princeton, N. J. 

Divinity Student. 

SAMUEL CAROTHERS, 

146 South Fairmont Ave., Pittsburg, Pa- 
in the clearing house department of the Marine Na- 
tional Bank, Pittsburg, Pa. 

ROBERT EDGAR CASKEY, 

1822 North 11th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Salesman for the E. I. DuPont Powder Co., Wilming- 
ton, Del. 

STUART ROBINSON CECIL, 

1537 Fourth Ave., Louisville, Ky. 

Lumber inspector and running a saw-mill in the woods 
for the Norman Lumber Co., Louisville, Ky. 

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CHAMBERLAIN, 
Chester, Orange Co., N. Y. 
192 A Sixth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

With A. B. Leach & Co., Investment Bonds, 149 
Broadway, New York City. 

NORMAN FLETCHER CHARLOCK, 

663 North Broad St., Elizabeth, N. J. 

No replies. 

WILLIAM BRIDGMAN CHURCHMAN, 
333 South 21st St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
La Fe, Maguabo, Porto Rico. 

Running a plantation. 

Married, Nov. 14, 1907, to Miss Katherine Nicoll, of 
Babylon, L. I. 



i 



ELMER LOUIS CLINE, 

1816 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 
310 East Main St. Marshalltown, Iowa. 

With the Letts & Fletcher Co., branch of the Western 
Grocer Co., at Marshalltown, Iowa. 

CHESTER MARTS CLOUD, 

68 William St., New York City. 

Insurance business with his father, J. G. Cloud. 

GEORGE IRWIN COCHRAN, 
Sewickley, Pa. 
Care A. B. Chase Piano Co., Norwalk, O. 

In the player-piano department. 

PHILIP GILLETT COLE, 

College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York City. 

Student of medicine. 

LOUIS HENRI CONDE, 

1206 Broadway, Indianapolis, Ind. 

Salesman for the H. T. Conde Implement Co., Indian- 
apolis, Ind. 

PHILLIP GRAHAM CONNELL, 
Avenue House, Evanston, 111. 

Assistant superintendent in the Fitz Simons & Connell 
Co., General Contractors and Engineers, 1014 Ta- 
coma Building, Chicago, 111. 

HARRY JOHN CONNOLLY, 

1509 North Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. 

Studying law in the office of Willard, Warren & 
Knapp, Lawyers, 603-612 Connell Building, Scran- 
ton, Pa. 

22 



MARSHALL COXE, 

1336 River Boulevard, St. Paul, Minn. 

Office work with the Archer-Daniels Linseed Co., 29th 
Ave., S.-E., Minneapolis, Minn. 

IRWIN DUNN COYLE, 
Bridgeton, N. J. 

Studying for the examination for admission to Pay 
Corps, U. S. N. 

ALLEN CRAIG, 

1822 "I" St., Washington, D. C. 
National Hotel, Millerstown, Pa. 

In the engineering corps, Pennsylvania R. R., care 
W. K. Martin, assistant engineer, Lewistown, Pa. 

ROBERT GOODWIN CRAIG, 

1822 "I" St., Washington, D. C. 
227 East 54th St., Chicago, 111. 

In the estimating department of the Link Belt Co., 

39th St. and Stewart Ave., Chicago. 
Married on December 31, 1904, Miss Celia H. Mc- 

Guire, of Washington, D. C. 
Robert Goodwin Craig, Jr., born November 7, 1905. 

GEORGE HOFFMAN CRESSE, 
Swainton, N. J. 

Teaching at Mercersburg Academy, Mercersburg, Pa. 

JAMES FREDERICK CROSS, JR. 

121s. Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. 

Studying law at the New York Law School and in 
advertising work with Everybody's Magazine, 31 E, 
17th St., New York City. 

23 



ROMAN RATHBURN CROTHERS, 
Elkton, Md. 

Attorney in Elkton, Md. Studied law at Johns Hop 
kins and the University of Maryland. 

GEORGE SMITH CUNNINGHAM, 
Blairsville, Pa. 
3739 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Student in the medical department, University of 
Pennsylvania. 

WARREN WARDLAW CUNNINGHAM, 
224 Yazoo St., Yazoo City, Miss. 

Student, New York Law School. Taught one year, 
Mount Tamalpais Military Academy, San Rafael, 
Cal. 

WILLARD WALKER CUTLER, JR., 
Morristown, N. J. 

Student of mining engineering, Columbia University, 
New York City. 

OREN NEWTON DAGES, 

1010 Bryden Road, Columbus, O. 
Technology Chambers, Boston, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Medical School. 

CARL NORTHUP DAILY, 

44 Lincoln Ave., Detroit, Mich. 

Occupation not yet determined. 

HENRY GREGG DANBY, 

1313 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. 

Secretary and Treasurer of the Wilmington Candy 
Co., 220 Market St., Wilmington, Del. 

24 



HENRY BUCKINGHAM DARLINGTON, 
4924 Centre Av., Pittsburg, Pa. 

Stock foreman in one of the mills of the Jones & 
Laughlin Steel Co., Pittsburg, Pa. 

JAMES EVERETT DAVIS, 

326 North Hyde Park Ave., Scranton, Pa. 

No replies. 

RAYMOND FOSTER DAVIS, 

147 Orchard St., Bloomfield, N. J. 

Photometer reader for the Westinghouse Lamp Co., 
Bloomfield, N. J. 

WALTER SEAMAN DAVISON, 
Hightstown, N. J. 
Syrian Protestant College, Beirut, Syria. 

Teacher of English. 

JAMES S. DE TURCK, 
Esterly, Pa. 
Hackensack, N. J. 

Teaching mathematics in the High School at Hacken- 
sack. 

CHARLES DE WITT DE VINNE, 

300 West 76th St., New York City. 

With Theodore L. DeVinne & Co., Printers, 395 La- 
Fayette St., New York City. 

ROBERT EDWARD DOANE, 

404 Hoffman St., Elmira, N. Y. 
Technology Chambers, Boston, Mass. 

Student of electrical engineering at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology. 

25 



RODERICK AITKEN DORMAN, 

28 West 69th St., New York City. 

In the dry goods business with Aitken, Son & Co., 873 
Broadway, New York City. 

LEE DOUGLAS, 

132 South Eighth Ave., Nashville, Tenn. 

Studying Law at the Vanderbilt University Law 
School, Nashville. 

RICHARD DOUGLAS, 

110 South Eighth Ave., Nashville, Tenn. 
Hatchie, Tenn. 

General manager of the Hatchie Lumber Co., Hatchie, 
Tenn. 

RAYMOND WADE DRAKE, 

980 Clinton Ave., Irvington, N. J. 

With the Mountain Ice Co., 51 Newark St., Hoboken, 
N.J. 

FRED STRANAHAN DURHAM, 

The Bartram, 33d & Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Treasurer of the Bonney Vise and Tool Works, 301 1- 
3015 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. 

JOSEPH EDWARD DURHAM, JR., 

The Bartram 33d & Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Secretary of the Bonney Vise and Tool Works, 301 1- 
3015 Chestnut St., Philadelphia. 

OGDEN DUTCHER, 

303 West 82d St., New York City. 
Newman, Scott County, Ark. 

Secretary and Treasurer of the Brushy Creek Lumber 
Co., Waldron, Ark. 

26 



i 



WILLIAM DYKEMAN, 

657 Jefferson Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

In the purchasing department of the N. Y. C. & H. R. 
R. R., Grand Central Station, New York City. 

DEANE EDWARDS, 

423 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 

Sohcitor in the real estate business with E. M. & H. F. 
Ware, 312 National German American Bank Build- 
ing, St. Paul, Minn. 

HAROLD SYDNEY EDWARDS, 
South Barre, Mass. 

With the Barre Wool Combing Co., South Barre, 

Mass. 
Married Miss Jettie Theola Wason, of Newburyport, 

Mass., on May 25, 1907. 

JOHN LINCOLN EISELE, 

59 Avon Ave., Newark, N. J. 

With Eisele & King, Brokers, 757 Broad St., Newark, 
N.J. 

JOHN DWIGHT EELLS, 
Walton, N. Y. 
144 Henry St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Reporter on The New York Tribune. 

MARION EPPLEY, 

361 Broadway, New York City. 
West Orange, N. J. 

Literary editor and advertising solicitor for The Scien- 
tific American, Munn & Co., 361 Broadway, New 
York City. 

27 



JOHN MONTAGUE ELY, 
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 

Bookkeeper in the People's Savings Bank, Cedar Rap- 
ids, Iowa. 

SANFORD GARLAND ETHERINGTON, 
156 Fifth Ave., New York City. 

Mining at El Salado, San Luis Potosi, Mexico. 

ROBERT FAIRING, 

57 Catherine St., Springfield, Mass. 

Studying law at the New York Law School and teach- 
ing at the Stevens Preparatory School, Hoboken, 
N. J. New York address not known, as no circulars 
have been answered. 

HENRY DENISON FISH, 
Hempstead, L. I. 

Reporter in the city department of The New York 
Herald. 

JOHN HENRY FITCH, JR., 

102 Wick Ave., Youngstown, O. 

With the John H. Fitch Co., Wholesale Grocers, 102- 

104 Wick Ave., Youngstown, Ohio. 
Married on August 21, 1907, Miss Pearl Bowman 

Squire, of Youngstown, Ohio. 

BROOKS FLEMING, JR., 
Fairmont, W. Va. 

Mine superintendent in the Fairmont Coal Co., Fair- 
mont, W. Va. 

Married on November 15, 1906, Miss Amy J. Dodson, 
of Columbus, Ohio. She died February 9, 1907, of 
typhoid fever. 

28 



■I 



SAMUEL WILSON FLEMING, JR., 
104 South St., Harrisburg, Pa. 
Kappa Alpha Lodge, South Bethlehem, Pa. 

Student of mechanical engineering at Lehigh Univer- 
sity. 

ARCHIBALD KENNEDY FOWLER, JR., 
Caledonia, N. Y. 
Princeton, N. J. 

Studying English in the Graduate School at Princeton, 
Preparatory to teaching. 

FREDERICK RUDOLPH FRANCKE, JR., 

2025 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 
310 East Main St., Marshalltown, Iowa. 

With the Letts-Fletcher Co. Branch of the Western 
Grocery Co., Marshalltown, Iowa. 

WILLIAM HENRY FRANKLIN, 
Hightstown, N. J. 

No replies. 

HENRY WADE FREEMAN, JR., 
South Orange, N. J. 

Clerk with the Harsbrown, Bogart & Battelle Co., 
Brokers, 25 Broad St., New York City. 

WILLIAM COLEMAN FREEMAN, 
Cornwall, Lebanon Co., Pa. 
9 North Front St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

Member of the Pennsylvania State House of Repre- 
sentatives from Lebanon County. Member of the 
Executive Committee, Board of Directors of the 
American Iron and Steel Co., Lebanon, Pa. 
Engaged to Miss Emily R. Henry, of Philadelphia. 
29 



LOUIS DANIEL FROELICK, 

609 East 21st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Care Robert Gailey, Peking, China. 

With the Princeton Work in Peking. 

BENJAMIN APPLEGATE FURMAN, 

65 South 10th St., Newark, N. J. 

Medical student at the College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons, New York City. 

JAMES CHAMBERLIN FURST, 
Bellefonte, Pa. 

Lawyer. 

ROBERT BARNES GALT, 

63 Vandeventer Place, St. Louis, Mo. 

Reporter on The St. Louis Times, St. Louis, Mo. 

THOMAS FRANCIS GALVIN, JR., 
124 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. 
Richmond Court, BrookHne, Mass. 

With Thomas F. Galvin, Inc., Florist and Landscape 

Gardener, 124 Tremont St., Boston. 
Married on August 23, 1907, Miss Mary Frances 

Cleneay, of Cincinnati, Ohio. 

JOHN JOSLIN GARDINER, 
Toledo, O. 
The Miltimore, Toledo, O. 

Manager of the mail order department and a director 
of the Hull Brothers Umbrella Co., Toledo. 

JOHN HENRY GEHRKIN, 

119 Java St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

No replies. 

30 



BENTON ROBERT GEIGER, 

305 North Sandusky St. Tiffin, O. 

Carpet salesman in the A. Weaver & Sons Co. Depart- 
ment Store, Fostoria, Ohio. 

EDWARD ASHLEY GERHARD, 

105 Harrison St., East Orange, N. J. 
19 Lawrence Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Studying for the ministry at the Episcopal Theological 
School, Cambridge, Mass., Class of 1909. Left 
Fisk & Robinson, Bankers, 35 Cedar St., New York, 
and tutored one-half year as equivalent for the first 
year in the seminary. 

GALE TAYLOR GERMAN, 

87 Canarsie Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Invoice clerk with Charles A. Schieren & Co., Tanning 
and Belt Manufactory, 30-38 Ferry St., New York 
City. 

BROWNLEE HARPER GIBSON, 
4504 Centre Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 

Booking-keeper in the real estate department of the 
Commonwealth Trust Co., 226 Fourth Ave., Pitts- 
burg, Pa. 

JAMES GILMORE, 

2031 North Howard St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Teacher of English in the Central High School of 
Philadelphia. 

FRANK PURNELL GLASS, JR., 

1030 South Hull St., Montgomery, Ala. 

Reporter on The Advertiser, Montgomery, Ala. 

31 



HARRY JACOB GO AS, 
Schuylkill Haven, Pa. 

With the N. Y. & N. J. Telephone Co., in New York 
City. 

LILBURN TRIGG GOLDSBOROUGH, 
924 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. 

Clerk with B. S. Johnston & Co., Stock Brokers, Stock 
Exchange Building, Baltimore, Md. 

JACK MILLER GOODENO, 

62 North 6th St., Newark, N. J. 

No reples. 

KENNETH SAWYER GOODMAN, 

5026 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Assistant treasurer of the Goodman Lumber Co., 1527 
Railway Exchange Building, Chicago, 111. 

LATIMER GOODRICH, 

1 1 Park Place, Keokuk, Iowa. 

Not heard from. 

JAMES WHITING GOPSILL, 

125 Summit Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 

Studying law, New York Law School. 

GEOFFREY GRAHAM, 

73 Hawthorne Place, Montclair, N. J. 

Unoccupied when last heard from. 

ALBERT EDWARD NEWTON GRAY, 
University Club, Newark, N. J. 

Member of the firm of the Standard Leather Washer 
Manufacturing Co., 24-26 Boudinot St., Newark, 
N.J. 

32 



THEODORE FRANCIS NEWTON GRAY, 
University Club, Newark, N. J. 

Member of the firm of the Standard Leather Washer 
Manufacturing Co., 24-26 Boudinot St., Newark, 
N.J. 

CLAYTON WELLINGTON GREENE, 
385 Jersey St., Buffalo, N. Y. 

Medical student at the University of Buffalo, Buffalo, 
N. Y. 

HAROLD BEEBE GREENLAND, 
315 Oak St., Syracuse, N. Y. 

Superintendent of the H. H. Franklin Manufacturing 
Co. Garage, Syracuse, N. Y. 

PAUL MORROW HALE, 

1203 E. First St., Duluth, Minn. 

On the engineering force of the Oliver Iron Mining 
Co., Coleraine, Itasca County, Minn. 

THOMAS PARKER HAMILTON, 
333 West Fifth St., Erie, Pa. 
306 East Ohio St., Chicago, HI. 

In the shop cost department of the Western Electric 
Co., Dept. 31-T, Chicago. 

SINCLAIR HAMILTON, 
Englewood, N. J. 

Studying law, Columbia University Law School. 

DANIEL STEWART HAMMACK, 

144 East Avenue 55. Los Angeles, Cal. 

Studying law in the office of Daniel M. Hammack, 
722-726 Los Angeles Trust Building, Los Angeles, 
Cal. 

33 



^ 



ELBERT CLARENCE HARDY, 

Care Morton Salt Co., Wyandotte, Mich. 

Superintendent of one of the mines. 

ARTHUR HARRIS, 

36 Jay St., Newark, N. J. 

63 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. 

Studying law, Harvard Law School. 

BERNARD HASBROUCK, 

Nyack, N. Y. 

Occupation not given. 

FREDERICK KIBBE HASKELL, 
Bradford, Pa. 

In the oil business in Van Buren, Ind. 

ARTHUR PIERSON HATCH, 
Stamford, Conn. 

Farming. 

WILLIAM WOODHULL HAY, 

157 West 123rd St., New York. 

Studying law, Columbia Law School. 
Married Miss Elizabeth B. Valk, December 19, 1907, 
New York City. 



LOUIS LEE HAYES, 

4389 Lindell Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 

Salesman with J. Kennard & Sons, 4th and Washing- 
ton Sts., St. Louis. 

Married Miss Mary Lois Kilpatrick, November 23, 
1907, at St. Louis, Mo. 



34 



MATTHEW COWDEN HAYES, 
Lewisburg, Pa. 
237 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. 

Student of electrical engineering at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology, Boston. Assistant secre- 
tary, Princeton Alumni Association of New Eng- 
land. 

WILLSON HAZARD, 

74 North Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. 

Engineer in the engineering department of the New 
York and New Jersey Telephone Co., 26 Cortlandt 
St., New York City. 

RUNKLE FISHER HEGEMAN, 

New Germantown, N. J. 
Baltimore, Md. 

Medical student at Johns Hopkins University. 

SIDNEY PARKER HENSHAW, 

136 East Thirty-eighth St., New York City. 
26 Winthrop Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Second year student at the Harvard Law School. 

HARRISON SAYRE HIGBIE, 

1013 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 

Selling mason materials for J. R. Say re, Jr., & Co., 
Newark, N. J. 

WILLIAM WARREN HILDRETH, 
Southampton, N. Y. 

Medical student, College of Physicians and Surgeons, 
New York City. 

FREDERICK STUBBINS HILL, 
Britt, Iowa. 

Assistant cashier of the Citizens' Bank, Britt, Iowa. 

35 



CLARENCE M. HILLEBRAND, 
Wauboy, South Dakota, 

Stock farming. 

ROGER HINDS, 

Queen Anne's Road, Richmond Hill, L. I. 
Princeton Club of New York. 

Studying law, New York Law School, and working 
for Hinds & Noble, 31 West 15th St., New York 
City. 

RAYMOND CLARENCE HOAG, 

Waterford, N. J. 

Principal of the Public School at Waterford, N. J. 

AMOS NATHAN HOAGLAND, 
Oxford, N. J. 
Care United States Consul Rio de Janerio, Brazil. 

In Brazil with Jennings 1907 for diamond mining. 
Was with the Veeder Manufacturing Co., Hartford, 
Conn. 

LAWRENCE ST. JOHN HOBBIE, 
315 Sixth Ave., Newark, N. J. 

Salesman for the Oliver Typewriter Co., 310 Broad- 
way, New York City. 

FRANK JILLARD HOEN, 

736 Jefferson St. Waverly, Baltimore, Md. 

Studying law. University of Maryland. Country 

squire on his farm outside of Baltimore. 
No replies. 

ROSSITER HOLBROOK 

Ossining, N. Y. 

No replies. 

36 



EDWARD PACKARD HOLDEN, JR. 
82 High St., Madison, N. J. 

Clerk in the commercial paper department of Blake 
Brothers & Co., Bankers, P. O. Box 607, New York 
City. 

GEORGE ANTHONY HOPKINS, 

180 Market St., Amsterdam, N. Y. 

Has been one year in the Graduate School, Princeton. 
Intends to study law. 

FOSTER ALBERT HOVEY, 

Hardwick, Vt. 

269 East Erie St., Chicago, Hi. 

In the shop cost department of the Western Electric 
Co., 259 South Clinton St., Chicago, 111. 

FRANK RAY HOWE, 

1740 "M" St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 
124 South Parsons Ave., Flushing, L. I. 

Engineer and manager of land development in the 
Queens Borough Corporation, corner Parsons and 
Queens Aves., Flushing, L. I. 

BRISON HOWIE, 

48 Sedgwick St., Mount Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. 
211 Franklin, University of Pennsylvania. 

Student at University of Pennsylvania. 

WILLIAM STUDLEY HOYT, 

45 Union Ave., Jamaica, L. I. 

New York salesman for the J. W. & C. B. Sheridan 
Co., Manufacturers of bookbinding and book-print- 
ing machinery, 58 Duane St., New York City. 

Z7 



OLIVER B. HUGHES, 

Third and Franklin Aves., Long Branch, N. J. 

With R. H. Hughes, Contractor and Builder, 132 3d 
Ave., Long Branch, N. J. 

EDGAR ALEXANDER ILL, 

1002 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 
350 West 71 St., New York City. 

Studying medicine. College of Physicians and Sur- 
geons, New York City. 

JOHN RANKIN IRWIN, 

633 Grand Ave., Keokuk, la. 

No replies. 

HARRY MATTHEWS JACK, 
8 Elm St., Bradford, Pa. 

Studying law with D. H. Jack, Bradford, Pa. 

JAMES KENNEY JACKSON, 

117 Chestnut St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

Reading law in the office of Oscar L. Jackson, 222 
Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

LOUIS NORWOOD JAMES, 

1621 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. 

No replies. 

HOMER HORTON JOHNSON, 

511 West Water St., Elmira, N. Y. 
Sheffield, Pa. 

With the Forest Chemical Co. 

JAMES J. JOHNSON, 
Sheffield, Pa. 

Department manager of department stores in Sheffield, 
Pa. 

38 



SYLVESTER JOHNSON, JR., 

1617 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 
Shattuck, Arizona, and Bisbee, Arizona. 

Civil engineer. 

J. RAYMOND JONES, 

519 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

No- replies. 

LAFON JONES, 

509 Keller Building, Louisville, Ky. 
Caro, Mich. 

Chief chemist in the Caro plant of the Michigan Sugar 
Co. 

ROBERT HARRISON JONES, JR., 
108 Merritts Ave., Athens, Ga. 

In the insurance business as the Division Director of 
the National Union Life Association, Austell Build- 
ing, Athens, Ga. Studying law at the University of 
Georgia. 

WILLIAM ANSLEY JONES, 
Mineral Point, Wis. 
De Pue, 111. 

Foreman in the acid plant of the Mineral Point Zinc 
Co., DePue, 111. 

HENRY CHRISTIAN KAHLER, 
998 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y. 

Assistant manager of sales for the Buffalo Forge Co., 
the Buffalo Steam Pump Co., and the George L. 
Squier Co., 490 Broadway, Buffalo, N. Y. 



39 



EMANUEL JOHN KALLINA, 
Chester, N. Y. 
44 Morgan Hall, Auburn, N. Y. 

Student of theology at the Auburn Seminary, Auburn, 
N. Y. 

HAROLD HALL KEITH, 

1900 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111. 

Salesman for the Illinois Electrical Co., 239 E. Madi- 
son St., Chicago, 111. 

EDWARD WASHBURN KELLOGG, 

Vineland, N. J. 

222 West Twenty-fourth St., New York City. 

Assistant engineer with Waring, Chapman & Farqu- 
har, Room looi, 874 Broadway, New York City, 
doing sanitary engineering. 

ROBERT WALLACE KELLOGG, 
Alexander Hall, Princeton, N. J. 

Graduate work in philosophy at Princeton. Graduated, 
Class of 1907. 

FRANK KENNEDY, 

Ross, Marin County, Cal. 

With the Thompson, Starrett Co., Building Construc- 
tion. 

tfjENJAMlN WARFIELD KERR, 

105 Mount Pleasant Ave., Newark, N. J. 
20 East Witherspoon, Princeton, N. J. 

Student in the electrical engineering school at Prince- 
ton, in the Class of 1908. 

40 



WILLIAM ERNEST KERSHAW, 

215 East Penn St., Germantown, Pa. 

Head of the commercial laboratory in the Electric 
Storage Battery Co., 19th St. and Allegheny Ave., 
Philadelphia, Pa. 

CARL OTTO VON KIENBUSCH, 

12 East Seventy-fourth St., New York City. 

General utility man with the firm of C. H. Spitzner & 
Son, Wholesale Leaf Tobacco, 165 Front St., New- 
York City. 

LITTLETON KIRKPATRICK, 

91 Lincoln Park, Newark, N. J. 

Cr. Stewart Sugar Refining Co., Ciego de Avila, Cuba. 

Representative of New York money invested. 

FREDERIC LUTHER KLINE, 
Ridgway, Pa. 

Running the Kline Advertising Agency, 607 Ellicott 
Square, Buffalo, N. Y., and Larson Block, Ridgway, 
Pa. 

Married on May 25, 1906, Miss Leila Ethel Case, in 
New York City. 

DOUGLAS LAIRD, 

48 Cluny Ave., Toronto, Canada. 
375 Hunter St., Peterboro, Ont. 

Working as a mill-hand in the flour mill of the Quaker 
Oats Co. at Peterboro, Ont. 

HENRY WILLIAM LANGMANN, 

121 West Fifty-seventh St., New York City. 

Stock clerk in the Macmillan Co., 66 Fifth Ave., New 
York City. 

41 



EDWARD PENNIMAN LARNED, 
Summit N. J. 

In the law office of W. Z. Larned, 156 Broadway, New 
York City. 

RICHARD SMITH LEAMING, 

Dennisville, N. J. 
Morton Park, 111. 

Lawn engineer for Morton Park, 111. 

EUGENE HAMILTON LESLIE, 
48 Auburn Ave., Columbus, O. 

Student of mining engineering at Columbia University. 

FRED CLAYTON LETTS, 

1014 Greenwood Boulevard, Evanston, III. 
3602 Main St., Kansas City. 

House salesman with the Western Grocer Co., Kansas 
City, Mo. 

FRANCIS ORVILLE LIBBY, 

639 Congress St., Portland, Me. 

Messenger in the Casco National Bank, Portland, Me. 
Expects to go to New York in banking. 

THOMAS LIGGETT, JR., 

305 Bank St., Sewickley, Pa. 

Care Western Allegheny R. R., New Castle, Pa. 

Chief Engineer Western Allegheny R. R. 

WILLIAM HENDRIE LLOYD, 

3918 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Salesman for the Dill & Collins Co., Printing Papers, 
827 Filbert St., Philadelphia, Pa. 



42 



JOHN LEWIS LUCKENBACH, 

26 Montgomery Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

In the repair department of the Lewis Luckenbach 
Transportation Co., 129 Broad St., New York City. 

WILLIAM LOGAN MacCOY, 

Fifty-eighth St. and Overbrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa, 

Studying law at the University of Pennsylvania Law 
School. Taught English at the Haverford School 
for one year. 



GORDON MACDONALD, JR., 

13 West Sixteenth St., New York City. 
Morristown, N. J. 

In the bond department of Strong, Sturgis & Co., 30 
Broad St., New York City. 

CHARLES GREEN MACKALL, 
Savannah, Ga. 
Norfolk, Va. 

Secretary and treasurer of the Gwathmey-Mackall 
Engineering Co., Atlantic Trust Building, Norfolk, 
Va. 



CHARLES ARTHUR MACKENZIE, 

39 Washington Square, New York City. 

Care Haskins & Sells, 30 Broad St., New York City. 

Accountant wtih Haskins & Sells, Public Accountants. 
Married on June 12, 1906, Miss Berniece Stewart, in 
New York. 



43 



1 



ALEXANDER ANDERSON MacKIMMIE, 

P. O. Box 182, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada. 

Teacher of modern languages at the Colchester Acad- 
emy, Truro, N. S., and Boudinot Fellow in Modern 
Languages. 

Married on April 6, 1906, Miss Jean Ross, in Brook- 
lyn, N. Y. 

Alexander Anderson MacKimmie, Jr., born December 
24, 1906. 

DONALD FRAZER MACPHERSON, 
403 Craigie Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Studying law at the Harvard Law School. 

JOHN FRANCIS MACPHERSON, 

200 North Grand Ave., Springfield, 111. 

Advertising work with Macpherson & Edward, Retail 
Dry Goods, Springfield, 111. 

CHESTER DUBOIS MARQUIS, 

613 East Grove St., Bloomington, III. 
118 Taylor St., Georgetown, S. C. 

General manager of the Georgetown Chemical Works, 
Box 503, Georgetown, S. C. 

THOMAS R. MATHEWS, 

1376 East 112th St., Cleveland, O. 

Advertising manager of the Cleveland Hardware Co., 
45th St., N. E., and Lakeside Ave., Cleveland. 

JOHN CLARKE MATTHAI, 

National Enameling and Stamping Co., Baltimore, Md* 
Station E. Baltimore County, Md. 

Salesman, National Enameling and Stamping Co., 
Manufacturers of Tin, Enamel, and Galvanized 
Ware, 1901 S. Light St., Baltimore. 



44 



ALBERT TOUZALIN MAURICE, 
Athens, Pa. 
Livingston Hall, Columbia University, New York City. 

Student, Columbia University Law School. 

DUNCAN McCALLUM, 

390 Union St., Memphis, Tenn. 

No occupation given. 

DANIEL FRANCIS McCARTHY, 

169 Nassau St., Princeton, N. J. 

115 West Sixty-fourth St., New York City. 

Civil engineer, chief of party, in the Pennsylvania 
R. R. Terminal, New York City, with the Westing- 
house, Church, Kerr Co., 227 West 33d St., New 
York City. 

Married on September 11, 1907, Miss Kathryn Pen- 
fold Warner, of Trenton, N. J. 

NEAL McCLANAHAN, 
Morning Sun, Iowa. 
Xenia, Ohio. 

Student, United Presbyterian Theological Seminary, 
Xenia. 

PAUL McCLANAHAN, 
Morning Sun, Iowa. 
Xenia, Ohio. 

Student, United Presbyterian Theological Seminary, 
Xenia. 

SAMUEL K. McCLAY, 

Wyoming Ave. and B St., Olney, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Has completed a business college course. 



45 



ALFRED McCLURE, 
Wyncote, Pa. 

No replies. 

JAY COOKE McCLURE, 
Wyncote, Pa. 

Assistant engineer in the Valley Forge Railroad Sys- 
tem, 2129 Land Title Building, Philadelphia, Pa. 

GEORGE DEARDORFF McCREARY, JR., 
124 South Van Pelt St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Salesman, Whitney & Kemmeses, Wholesale Coal, 512 
Stephen Girard Building, Philadelphia. 

Married on June 20, 1906, Miss Ellen Marnoe Whar- 
ton Williams, of Philadelphia. 

NORMAN LOCKWOOD McCUTCHEON, 
Greenwich, Conn. 

No replies. 

KENNETH MARTIN McEWEN, 

23 Church St., Amsterdam, N. Y. 
Princeton Club, New York City. 

Student, New York Law School. 

JULIAN ESSELSTYN McGIFFERT, 
Roselle, N. J. 
122 West 64th St., New York City. 

General advertising, Frank Presbrey Co., 3 West 29th 
St., New York City. 

WILLIAM TREDICK McINTIRE, 

241 Summit Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 

Stock clerk with T. A. Mclntyre & Co., Bankers and 
Brokers, 71 Broadway, New York City. 

46 



GEORGE ROSS McKEE, 

after Feb. 12th. 

Riverside Drive and 119 St., New York City. 

With F. R. Woods & Co., Real Estate, Broadway and 

80th St., New York City. 
Married Miss Christine W. Hayward, January 15, 

1908, New York City. 

EDWARD DUNCAN McKELLAR, 
Forney, Texas. 

Has been at the Eastman Business College, Pough- 
keepsie, N. Y. 

ARCHIBALD AUGUS McLEOD, JR., 

Haddonfield, N. J. 

Assistant bookkeeper in the Real Estate Trust Co., 
Philadelphia, Pa. 

FRANCIS CONOVER McMILLAN, 
Princeton, N. J. 

No replies, 

ALEXANDER McMILLAN, 
Princeton, N. J. 
19th St. and Franconia Ave., Flushing, N. Y. 

Assistant Engineer in the Rickert-Finlay Realty Co., 
Broadway, Flushing, N. Y. 

JOHN McHAUGHTON, 
Kankanna, Wis. 

No replies. 

OSCAR HARMON McPHERSON, 

Lawrenceville, N, J. 

Teaching, Lawrenceville School. 

47 



DANIEL IVINS MESSLER, 
Deerfield, N. J. 

No replies. 

JOHN O. MILLER, 

Masontown, Fayette Co., Pa. 

Front chainman in the engineer corps of the H. C. 
Frick Co., Masontown, Pa. 

SUTHERLAND MILLER, 

115 Amity St., Brooklyn. 

Student of medicine at the Long Island College Hos- 
pital, Class of 1909. 

HAROLD RUCKMAN MIXSELL, 
216 Spring Garden, Easton, Pa. 
350 West 71st St., New York City. 

Student, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New 
York City. 

JOSEPH ARTHUR MORRISON, 

243 Madison Ave., Flushing L. I. 

Civil engineer on the Technical Staff of the Long 
Island R. R., 44 Union Hall St., Jamaica, L. I. 

HARRY LAWSON MOORE, 
Clarion, Pa. 
New York City. 

Real estate agent for the Garden City Estates, Flat- 
iron Building, New York City. 



48 



LEWIS SPENCER MORRIS, 

32 Liberty St., New York City. 

Residence not settled. Studying law at the New York 

Law School. 
Married on April 6, 1907, to Miss Emily Coster, of 

New York. 

STERLING MORTON, 

717 Railway Exchange, Chicago, 111. 
23 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. 

Salesman for the International Salt Co., 717 Railway 
Exchange, Chicago. 

WILLIAM CALHOUN MOTTER, 
St. Paul, Minn. 
394 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 

Selling agent in the Northwest for H. L. George, Mill 
Agent and General Commission Merchant, Cotton 
and Woolens, 230 Endicott Building, St.' Paul. 

JOHN RANDALL MUNN, 

13 Munn Ave., East Orange, N. J. 
Rosebud, Nevada. 

Secretary and treasurer of the Rosebud Mining and 
Leasing Co., Rosebud, Nev. Coaching football in 
Princeton, fall, 1907. 

ORSON DESAIX MUNN, 

361 Broadway, New York City. 
Orange, N. J. 

Learning the work of The Scientific American, Pub- 
lishing and Patents, Munn & Co., 361 Broadway, 

N. Y. 



49 



CLAYTON ARTHUR MUSSER, 
702 N. 6th St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

With the Haines Oil Pump Co., York, Pa. 

FRANCIS JOHN NASH, 
Manitowac, Wis. 

With the Forrest City Manufacturing Co., Forrest 
City, Ark. 

FRED RUSSELL NASON, 
North Andouse, Mass. 
1 1 Liberal Club, Winnepeg, Canada. 

No replies have been received from this address, but 
his friends have trailed him on a surveying party in 
the Canadian Northwest. He has been offered a 
position on a magazine. 

CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN NICHOLL5, 
713 Chestnut St., St. Louis Mo. 

No replies. 

WALTER CHARLES NEIS, 

74 Main St., Madison, N. J. 

Assistant managing clerk with Van Schaick & Brice, 
Lawyers, lOO Broadway, N. Y. 

BOYD NIXON, 

Bridgeton, N. J. 

" The Carleton ", Berkeley, Cal. 

Selling machinery in the West. 

JOSEPH HENRY NUELLE, 

4807 Prairie Ave., Chicago, 111. 
Norwich, N. Y. 

Assistant engineer with the New York, Ontario and 
Western R. R., Norwich, N. Y. 



so 



WILLIAM PROCTOR SEABRIGHT OAKFORD, 
405 Perry Ave., Peoria, 111. 

Draughting and surveying for the Harman Engineer- 
ing Co., 109 S. Jefferson St., Peoria. 

ALVAR DeCOMEAU O^BRIEN, 

320 West 89th St., New York City. 

No replies. 



WALTER TOMPKINS ODELL, 
Tompkins Cove, N. Y. 

Started for the Phihppine Islands, September, 1907. 



GEORGE WARREN OFFUTT, 

5508 Wisconsin Ave., Washington, D. C. 
1 6 Mellen St., Cambridge, Mass. 

Law student, Harvard Law School. 

JOHN KELSO ORMOND, 
Princeton, N. J. 
909 North Spring St., Pensacola, Fla. 

Teaching in the Pensacola Classical School, Pensacola, 
Fla. 

ARTHUR ORR, 3rd, 
Evanston, 111. 
Hotel Fayot, Paris, France. 

Studying for the Diplomatic Service at the Ecole Libre 
des Sciences Politiques. Address, Monroe & Co.,.. 
7 Rue Scribe, Paris, France. 

SI 



LEMUEL OSBORNE, 

55 Arlington Ave., East Orange, N. J. 
3426 Holmes St., Kansas City, Mo. 

With Ira G. Hedrick, Consulting Engineer, 309 Keith 
& Perry Building, Kansas City, Mo. 

ARTHUR HOUGHTON OTIS, 
Yonkers, N. Y. 

Working in the electric shops of the Otis Elevator 
Co., Yonkers, N. Y. 

GILBERT McCAULEY OVES, 

116 Washington St., Harrisburg, Pa. 

Draughtsman in the State Highway Department, Har- 
risburg, Pa. 

EDWARD ALBERT PALMER, 

First National Bank, Houston, Texas. 

Banking. 

FREDERICK PARKER, 

Manasquan, N. J. 

With Eisele & King, Brokers, 757-759 Broad St., 
Newark, N. J. 

DYER PEARL, JR., 

34 West Seventy-third St., New York City. 

With Pearl & Co., Bankers & Brokers, 27 William 
St., New York City. 

OLIVER HAZARD PERRY, JR., 
Elmhurst, N. Y. 

Student, New York Law School, New York City. 



52 



JAMES JUDD PETRIE, 
Pulaski, N. Y. 
73 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. 

Traffic inspector in the General Manager's office, New 
York Telephone Co., 55 Franklin St., New York 
City. 

ROBERT PETTIT, 

1021 Greenwood Boulevard, Evanston, III. 

Manager of the Gifford-Pettit Manufacturing Co., 

12 1 7 Devon Ave., Chicago, 111. 
Married on June 7, 1905, Miss Rachel Hazlehurst, of 

Evanston, 111. 

McNAIR ATWATER PHILLIPS, 

1642 Sanderson Ave., Scranton, Pa. 

No replies. 

HENRY DOUGLAS PIERCE, JR., 

1415 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 
217 Winthrop Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Student, Harvard Law School. 

HOWARD OLMSTEAD PIERSON, 
85 East Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 
66 West Forty-sixth St., New York City. 

Student, Columbia Law School, New York City. 

RICHARD STEADMAN PITTS, 

Warwick, N. Y. 

In the concrete construction business. 

ALBERT THOMAS POTTER, 

1913 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Care Quaker Oats Co., Atlantic City, N. J. 

Manager Atlantic City branch of the Quaker Oats Co. 



53 



CHARLES PRESBREY, 

3 West Twenty-ninth St., New York City. 
2345 Broadway, New York City. 

In advertising work with the Frank Presbrey Co., 3 
West 29th Street, New York City. 

THOMAS JEX PRESTON, 

Traveling abroad on an art fellowship. 

COLE BRITTON PRICE, 

1727 North Washington Ave., Scranton, Pa. 

Studying law in his father's office, 120 Wyoming Ave., 
Scranton. 

JAMES McALPIN PYLE, 

673 Fifth Ave., New York City. 
403 Craigie Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Studying Law at the Harvard Law School. 

CHARLES LOUIS QUINTARD, 

35 South Clinton St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
144 Pierrpont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Studying law at the New York Law School and work- 
ing in the Circulation Department of the Evening 
Mail, New York. 

EWING LAWRENCE RAFFERTY. 

With the Nernest Lamp Co., Garrison Place and Fay- 
ette Street, Pittsburg, Pa. (?) No replies. 

CHARLES MUTHART REBERT, 
312 Evans St., Pottstown, Pa. 

Teacher of English and Mathematics in the Pottstown 
High School, Pottstown, Pa. 



54 



HOWARD BECK REED, 
Seabright, N. J. 

Student, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New 
York City. Writes magazine stories. 

SAMUEL JACKSON REID, JR., 

757 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Student, New York Law School, and in the office of 
Roe & McCombs, 96 Broadway, New York City. 

GEORGE HENRY REPPERT, 

1045 South Negley Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 
264 Newbury St., Boston. 

Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Bos- 
ton. 

HAROLD CHARLES RICHARD, 
3 1 Broadway, New York City. 
46 East Seventy-second St., New York City. 

In the State Bank, 376 Grand Street, New York City. 

RAYMOND BEATTY RICHARDSON, 

2054 East Seventy-ninth St., Cleveland, O. 

Shipping clerk with the Upson, Walton Co., Ship 
Chandlers, 13 10 River Avenue, N. W., Cleveland. 

WALTER WASHINGTON NORTH RIGHTER, 
" The Sherwood," Philadelphia, Pa. 

Occupation not recorded. Was with the Keystone 
Bonding Co., Philadelphia. 

MONTGOMERY ROBINSON, 
Lovelock, Nevada. 

Manager of the Lone Mountain Gold Mining Co., 
Lovelock, Nevada. 



55 



1 



WILLIAM WHITE RODGERS, 

317 North Limestone St., Springfield, O. 

Secretary of the Electrical Construction Supply Co., 
Springfield. 

FRANK BINGHAM ROLLINS, 

" Grassland," Columbia, Mo. 
287 Mill St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 

Student at the Eastman Business College, Poughkeep- 
sie, N. Y. 

JOHN DAVISON RUE, JR., 

R. F. D. No. 2, Trenton, N. J. 
14 Park St., Princeton, N. J. 

Assistant in Chemistry at Princeton. 

FRANK KEITH RYAN, 

5558 VanVersen Ave., St. Louis, Mo. 
Hampton, N. B., Canada. 

Practicing law with F. H. Bacon, Holland Building, 
Seventh and Olive Streets, St. Louis. 

HOWARD CONDIT SAYRE, 

Madison, N. J. 

Traveling salesman for L. A. Say re & Co., manufac- 
turers of hardware specialties, 334 Mulberry Street, 
Newark, N. J. 

PHILIP HAYNES SCHAFF, 

737 Ridge Ave., Allegheny, Pa. 

General bookkeeper. Peoples National Bank, Pittsburg, 
Pa. 

ALEXANDER HODGE SCOTT, 

509 Hansberry St., Germantown, Pa. 

Civil engineer, service foreman in the United Gas 
Improvement Co., Broad and Arch Streets, Phil- 
adelphia, Pa. 

56 



HENRI SCHWOB, 

122 West Eighty-sixth St., New York City. 

With Adolph Schwob, Importer and Exporter of 
Watches, 170 Broadway, New York City. 

PAUL STARK SEELEY, 
Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 
Cambridge, Mass* 

Law student. Harvard Law School. 

JEHIEL GARDNER SHIPMAN, 
Belvidere, N. J. 
256 West Seventy-third St., New York City. 

Student N. Y. Law School. 

ISAAC LOPER SHOEMAKER, 

226 North Laurel St., Bridgeton, N. J., 

In the managing department of the Cumberland Glass 
Manufacturing Co., Bridgeton, N. J. 

LYNDEN BROWN SHOEMAKER, 
Little Silver, N. J. 

Civil Engineer with the Penn., N. Y. & L. L R. R. Co., 
at 315 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Taught one 
year, C. E. department at Princeton. 

HALSEY MELVILLE SIMMONS, 

1706 Park Place, Baltimore, Md. 

Journalism and Advertising with the Medical Journal 
Co., 608 Professional Building, Baltimore, Md. Ex- 
pects to be with The Medical Review of Reviews, 
616 Madison Avenue, N. Y., this winter. 

FRANK PETERSON SIMONS, 

905 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 

Studying law, New York Law School and in the office 
of Stuart & Stuart, 60 Wall Street, New York City. 

57 



GEORGE STEWART SIMONS, JR., 

905 Watchung Ave., Plainfield, N. J. 

No occupation given. 

RANDOLPH STEWART SIMPSON, 

1301 Rhode Island Ave., Washington, D. C. 

Student of Electrical Engineering at Princeton. 

SIDNEY MERVYN SINCLAIR, 
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 

"Hog Driver" for T. M. Sinclair & Co., Pork Packers, 
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 

HERBERT JAMES SMITH, 
Putnam, Conn. 

Junior member of the firm of Card & Smith, Civil 
Engineers, Putnam, Conn. 

HOMER DEWHURST SMITH, 

362 South Negley Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 

Receiving Teller in the Bank of Pittsburg, Pittsburg, 
Pa. 

ROGER WILLIAMS SMITH, 
Waterloo, Iowa. 

Student, Harvard Law School. Degree of A. B., Har- 
vard, 1907. 

SHERBURN MERRILL SMITH, 

3355 Grand Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. 

Bookkeeper and Assistant Teller, Marshall & Ilsley 
Bank, Milwaukee. 

KALMAN SPELLETICH, 

1305 Arlington Ave., Davenport, la. 

In the sales department of the U. N. Roberts Sash and 
Door Co., Davenport. 

S8 



GEORGE S. SPOHN, 
Krumsville, Pa. 
8 S. E. Princeton. 

Charles Scribner University Fellow in English at 
Princeton, 

DAVID CHRISTIE STAGG, 
Leonia, N. J. 

Civil Engineer, office assistant with C. C. Vermeule. 
Consulting Engineer, 203 Broadway, New York City. 

EDWARD OTIS STANLEY, JR., 

40 Hawthorne Ave., East Orange, N. J. 

Student, Columbia University Law School. 

GEORGE BLACK STEWART, JR., 
Auburn, N. Y. 
Beirut, Syria. 

Teaching English in the Syrian Protestant College, 
Beirut, Syria. 

HENRY STICKNEY, 

1612 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. 

Assistant Engineer on the Baltimore Sewerage Com- 
mission. 

GEORGE WATERS STIEFF, 

1222 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. 
Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. 

With Charles N. Stieff, Piano Manufacturer, 9 North 
Liberty Street, Baltimore, Md. 

JOHN HUNT STITES, 

1604 Cherokee Parkway, Louisville, Ky. 
61 Kenyon Bid., Louisville, Ky. 

Law Student. 

59 



BAYARD STOCKTON, JR. 

" Morven," Princeton, N. J. 

256 West Seventy-third St., New York City. 

Student, New York Law School. 

CHARLES HELME STRATER, 

1127 Third Ave., Louisville, Ky. 
406 Craigie Hall, Cambridge, Mass. 

Law student, Harvard Law School. 

E. N. STROM, 

5811 Midway Park, Austin, Chicago, 111. 

With Pettibone, Milliken & Co., Railroad Supplies, 725 
Marquette Building, Chicago. 

CARL M. STROMBERG, 
Saranac Lake, N. Y. 

When last heard from, was in the engineering corps of 
the Indiana Steel Co., at Gary, Ind, 

PAUL BARRETT SULLIVAN, 

Care of Brooklyn Life, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Assistant Manager of the advertising department of 

Brooklyn Life. 
Married on March 5, 1907, Miss Louise M. Hetrich, 

of Asbury Park, N. J. 

ELIAS SUNSTEIN, 

1132 Fayette St., Allegheny, Pa. 

Studying law, Pittsburg Law School, and in the office 
of Weil & Thorp, 822 Frick Building, Pittsburg. 

ADRON LEIGH SWAN, 

219 1-2 South Washington St. 
Butte, Mont. 

"Common Miner." 

60 



MMMBMMflMMMl 



ADDISON F. M. TALBOTT, 

55 Ketchum Place, Buffalo, N. Y. 

Reporter on The Buffalo Times, Buffalo, N. Y. 
Married on April 26, 1905, Miss Alice H. McKinney, 

of Buffalo, N. Y. 
Alice Mary Talbott, born August 27, 1907, at Buffalo. 

HARRY WOOLSON TAPLIN, 
89 State St., Boston, Mass. 
991 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, Mass. 

General Manager of the Eagle Quarrying Co., 89 State 
St., Boston, Mass. 

SWIFT TARBELL, 

The Ansonia, New York City. 

Secretary of the Garden City Estates, Flatiron Build- 
ing, Broadway and 23d St., New York City. 

Married on November 28, 1907, Miss Virgie Mar- 
guerite Whitcomb, at Garden City, L. I. 

LEE CARLTON THAYER, JR., 

2460 Belle Fontaine St., Indianapolis, Ind. 

Treasurer of the Lee C. Thayer Co., Greenfield, Ind. 

HERBERT STEPHEN THOMPSON, 
Kingston, N. J. 
107 Halsey St., Newark, N. J. 

Civil engineer, chief of party, the Hudson Companies, 
44 Hudson Place, Hoboken, N. J. 

NORMAN BROWN TOOKER, 

28 Evergreen Place, East Orange, N. J. 
147 West Sixty-third St., New York City. 

Student, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New 
York City. 

61 



BARRY EYRE TOWNSEND, 
Fina, O. 

No replies. 

JOSEPH MONTGOMERY TRACE, 

227 West State St., Harrisburg, Pa. 
317 Bushkill St., Easton, Pa. 

Telephone electrician with the Western Electric Co., 
New York and Chicago. 

WILLIAM FITZHUGH TURNER, 

1328 Jackson Ave., New Orleans, La. 
Almada, Cal. 

Civil engineer, in the assistant resident engineer's 
office of the Southern Pacific R. R., 3d and Town- 
send St. station, San Francisco, Cal. 

FREDERIC ULLMANN, JR. 

282 East Forty-eighth St., Chicago, 111. 

Student, Northwestern University Law School, 1803 
Fisher Building, Chicago, 111. 

SAMUEL UPDEGRAFF, 

306 Amber St., Pittsburg, Pa. 

Stock foreman in one of the mills of the Jones & 
Laughlin Steel Co., Pittsburg, Pa. 

GIFFORD MILLS UPTEGROVE, 

Care of Uptegrove & Polhemus, 1 Madison Ave., N. Y. 
New Caanan, Conn. 

Member of the firm of Uptegrove & Polhemus, in the 
lumber business, i Madison Avenue, New York. 

PERCY LINWOOD URBAN, 
Lansdale, Pa. 
Princeton, N. J. 

Special Fellow in English. 

62 



OLIVER DeGRAY VANDERBILT, JR., 
45 Evergreen PL, East Orange, N. J. 
6 East Thirtieth St., New York City. 

United States representative of "Perrier" Imported 
French Table Water, 6 East 30th St., N. Y. 

RICKER VAN METRE, 

Shahola, Pike County, Pa. 
Deer River, Minn. 

Sales manager of the Shahola Lumber Co., Shahola, 

Pa. 
Married on June 19, 1907, Miss Louise G. Watkins, of 

St. Paul, Minn. 

HUBERT VAN ZANDT, 

102 Greenwood Ave., Trenton, N. J. 
Hotel Carnegie, Munhall, Pa. 

Sales agent for the U. S. Steel Corporation, Carnegie 
Building, Pittsburg, Pa. 

JACQUES LEONARD VAUCLAIN, 
' Rosemont, Pa. 

Showing them how to build engines at the Baldwin 
Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, Pa. 

DONALD CUYLER VAUGHAN, 
Garden City, L. I. 

Expects to go to Oxford, fall of 1907, to study English 
literature. 

ROBERT GRINSTEAD VAUGHAN, 
1119 Third Ave., Louisville, Ky. 

Partner in the Vaughan Manufacturing Co., Extension 
Table Slides, 916-920 Congress St., Louisville, Ky. 

63 



RUSSELL CHARLES VEIT, 

171 West Seventy-first St., New York City. 

Receiver for the Brown & Fleming Contracting Co., 
129 Broad Street, New York City. 

EDWARD CARRINGTON VENABLE, JR., 
Peterboro, Va. 

Writing articles for magazines and books and doing 
literary work in general. 

JOSEPH ROY VETTERLEIN, 
Radnor, Pa. 

Manager of the advertising department of Vetterlein 
Brothers, Tobacco Manufacturers, 144 N. 5th St., 
Philadelphia. 

CLIFFORD IRVING VOORHEES, 

1 8 Livingston Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. 
Savings Institution Bid., New Brunswick, N. J. 

In the office of Willard Voorhees, Attorney-at-Law, 
Savings Institution Building, New Brunswick. Ex- 
pects to return to New York Law School next year 
and finish his course. He can then commence prac- 
ticing immediately, having taken the required year 
in an office. 

THOMAS ENNALLS WAGGAMAN, 
Annapolis, Md. 
1631 19th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 

With John F. Waggaman, Real Estate, Loans and 
Insurance; vice-president and general manager of 
the West End Storage Co., 1321 F St., N. W., 
Washington; director Annapolis Banking and Trust 
Co., Annapolis. 

Married on October 6, 1906, Miss Frances Margaret 
Fuller, at Philadelphia. 

Thomas Ennalls Waggaman, Jr., born at Washington, 
July 20, 1907. 

64 



HENRY BABCOCK WALKER, 
800 Riverside, Evansville, Ind. 

Lawyer, junior partner in the firm of Walker & 
Walker, Lawyers, 217 Upper Third St., Evansville, 
Ind. 



JOHN CADWALLADER WALLER, 
Skaneateles, N. Y. 

No replies. 

WILLIAM HEMMINGS WALSH, 

349 Van Buren St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Care Navy Department, Washington, D. C. 

Midshipman in the United States Navy, U. S. S. Vir- 
ginia. 

WILLIAM CLYDE WESTCOTT, 
Union City, Pa. 
Endeavor, Forest Co., Pa. 

Manager of J. D. Westcott & Son's mill at Endeavor, 
Pa. 



WARREN CALVIN WHITNEY, 

184 West Main St., Norwalk, Ohio 

Learning the business and selling player-pianos for the 
A. B. Chase Piano Co., Norwalk, Ohio. 

SILAS MOORE WILEY, 

77 East 47th St., Chicago, III. 

803 South State St., Ann Arbor, Mich. 

Law Student, University of Michigan. 

65 



ELLIOTT CHURCHILL WILLIAMS, 
Beverly Apartments, Evanston, III. 

Insurance Solicitor for the Columbian National Life 
Insurance Co., 622 First National Bank Building, 
Chicago, 111. 

RAYMOND STORM WILLIAMS, 

73 Hawthorne Ave., Glen Ridge, N. J. 

Assistant manager of the Montclair branch of the 
N. Y. & N. J. Telephone Co. 

ARTHUR EDWIN WILSON, 

230 So. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburg, Pa. 
909 North Spring St., Pensacola, Fla. 

Teacher of mathematics in the Pensacola Classical 
School. 

THOMAS MULLEN WOODWARD, 
311 No. 37th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Student of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. 

ARCHIBALD COTTER WORTH, 

CreeskiU, N. Y. 

Studying medicine at the New York Homoeopathic 
College, 64th St. and Ave. A, New York City. 

DANIEL GULDIN YODER, 
Oley, Pa. 
1 70 Orange Ave., Irvington, N. J. 

Head of the commercial department in the Irvington 
High School. 

HAROLD ZEISS, 

1 1 Aldine Square, Chicago, 111. 

No replies. 

OS 



Members Who Have Been Connected 

with the Class but Who Have 

Not Been Heard from 

since They Left. 

These are the best addresses obtainable. If any member of the Class 
knows the address or occupation of any of the following, kindly 
send such information to the Secretary. 

Charles Henry Adams Portland, Me. 

Griswold Adams Erie, Pa. 

Harry Edgar Andrews New Bethlehem, Pa. 

Kirk Rose Bachman Knoxville, Tenn. 

Morey C. Bartholomew 

John Insley Blair, 3d 706 Jefferson Avenue, Scranton, Pa. 

George Frederick Brensinger Jersey City, N. J. 

Paul Lorenzo Brooke 224 King Street, Pottstown, Pa. 

James Twitchell Brown Williamsport, Pa. 

Clarence Oakley Burgess Baltimore, Md. 

Harry Percival Butler Croton Falls, N. Y. 

John Lawrence Campbell Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Robert Erskine Campbell, Jr Princeton, N. J. 

Seth Catlin Chicago, 111. 

James Harmon Cruickshank 275 Central Park West, N. Y. 

Carl W. Dailey 

Malcolm Hayward Davidson Fishkill, N. Y. 

John Hall Deane, Jr 62 East 78th Street, New York, N. Y. 

Roger Dunscombe 392 Canal Street, N. Y. 

Daniel Conan Eagan Philadelphia, Pa. 

Blaine Elkins Elkins, West Virginia 

Raoul Herbert Fleischmann 4 West 77th Street, New York City 

J. C. Furst 

Philip Gordon West Point, N. Y. 

John Douglas Gordon Philadelphia, Pa. 

Norman Hallett New York City 

67 



William H. Harden Hightstown, N. J. 

Matthew Kennedy Harrah Beaver, Pa. 

B. Hasbrouck 

Fred C. Havens Point Pleasant, N. J. 

Edward Florence Hays, Jr Pittsburg, Pa. 

Norman Young Hearn Ft. Snelling, Minn. 

Harry Lawrence Hearn Ft. Snelling, Minn. 

Herbert Clinton Hemmingway i6 William Street, East Orange, N. J. 

William Wayne Hindeman Clarion, Pa. 

Chauncey Todd Horton New York City 

Philip Louis Inch Newport News, Va. 

Joe Thorn Jackson Atlanta, Ga. 

Theodore Davis Keech Ridgewood, N. J. 

Herbert Franklin Williams Ketcham..2i2 Gates Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Paul Laidley 3538 Washington Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. 

Herrick Johnson Lane Fremont, Ohio 

Schuyler Maurice Leggett West New Brighton, Staten Island 

Harrison Barksdale Lightcap, Jr Yazoo City, Miss. 

Hosea Stetson Look Cottage City, Mass. 

Harold C. Lyons New York City 

C. G. Marshall Savannah, Ga. 

G. Marshall, Jr 13 W. i6th Street, New York City 

B. F. R. McGee 355 Fairmount Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 

Frederick Wilson Moore Union City, Pa. 

John S. Nicholl 909 Lake Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. 

Arthur Nicholson Oakmont, Pa. 

George Burton Nicholson Hotel Schenley, Pittsburg, Pa. 

George Patton Wayne, Pa. 

Harold Dinsmore Phillips Chicago, 111. 

John Pogue 2312 Park Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 

Eugene Cowles Pomeroy Cleveland, Ohio 

Stanton Greene Prentiss Columbus, Ohio 

Charles Russell Prentiss 21 18 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. 

Charles Wesley Preston, Jr 912 St. Marks Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Carl Ritter Purtill Charleston, 111. 

James Chandler Ray Duluth, Minn. 

Robert Peter Rentschler Hamilton, Ohio 

Charles Redner Richards 13 E. 31st Street, New York City 

William Rittenhouse 406 West Marshall Street, Norristown, Pa. 

Bruce W. Seeton 

George Schober 301 Fifth Street, Jersey City, N. J. 

Francis Burritt Shepard New York City 

William J. Simpson 1231 Madison Avenue, New York City 

Lane Kimball Stone, Jr New York City 

68 



H, W. TapHn 

Thomas Oxenbridge Thacher Albany, N. Y. 

Edward Gerrish Thurber Detroit Mich, 

R. L. Ullman Baltimore, Md. 

H. D. Valentine 

A. D. Van Dyke Princeton, N. J. 

Robert Marshall Wilson Milton, Pa. 

Eugene Dutihl Wisner Summit, N. J. 

Total 78 



69 



3ln ii^mnnam 



ROBERT HOMER GAINES 

August, 1903. 

CLAUDE A. ALEXANDER 

April 9, 1904. 

CLARENCE CARNAGHAN NEVIN 

May, 1906. 

GEORGE WITHERS EVANS 

April 21, 1906. 

FREDERICK HENRY COSSITT 

July I, 1906. 

ELBERT LEE BARNEY 

May 14, 1907. 

PAUL E. OBERNDORF 

October 13, 1907. 



71 



How 1906 is divided in Business 

THE BUSINESS MEN, 207 



Bell 

Bradley 

Brownlee 

Burleigh 

Burton 

Caskey 

Cline 

Cochran 

Coxe 

Danby 

Dorman 

Drake 

Dykeman 

Fitch 

Fran eke 

Galvin 

Gardiner 

Geiger 

German 

Gibson 

Goas 

Greenland 

Haskell 

Hayes, L .L. 

Higbee 

Hobbie 



COMMERCIAL, 51 



Hoyt 

Johnson, J. J. 

Keith 

Kienbusch 

Letts 

Lloyd 

Luckenbach 

Mackenzie 

Matthai 

McCreary 

Morton 

Motter 

Musser 

Nixon 

Petrie 

Potter 

Rafferty 

Richardson 

Schwob 

Spelletich 

Strom 

Thayer 

Vanderbilt 

Van Zandt 

Williams, R. ! 



MANUFACTURING, 



Baker 

Brown, A. H. 
Brown, G. G. 
Conde 

Craig, R. G. 
Darlington 
Davis, R. F. 
Durham, F. S. 
Durham, J. E. 
Edwards, H. S. 
Gray, A. E. N. 
Gray, T. F. N. 
Greenland 
Hamilton, T. P. 
Hovey 

Johnson, H. H. 
Jones, L. 
Jones, W. A. 
Kahler 



Z7 

Kershaw 

Laird 

Marquis 

Mathews 

Otis 

Pettit 

Rodgers 

Sayre 

Shoemaker, I. L. 

Sinclair 

Stieflf 

Trace 

Updegrafif 

Uptegrove 

Varighan, R. G. 

Vetterlein 

Westcott 

Whitney 



73 



CONSTRUCTION, 4 



Anderson 




Kennedy 


Hughes 




Pitts 


BANKING AND BROKERAGE, 25 


Abbott 




Holden 


Ambrose, C. A. 




Libby 


Barr 




Macdonald 


Bird 




Mclntyre 


Brooke 




McLeod 


Brown, H. 




Palmer 


Carothers 




Parker 


Chamberlain 




Pearl 


Eisele 




Richard 


Ely 




Schaff 


Freeman, H. W. 


, Jr. 


Smith, H. D. 


Goldsborough 




Smith, S. M. 


Hill 


INSURANCE, 4 




Bokum 




Waggaman 


Cloud 




Williams, E. C. 




ENGINEERING, 3 


11 


Abbey- 




Miller, J. 


Barry 




Morrison 


Brunswick 




Muelle 


Connell 




Oakford 


Craig, A. 




Osborne 


Hale 




Oves 


Hazard 




Thompson 


Howe 




Turner 


Johnson, S. 




Scott 


Learning 




Shoemaker, L. B, 


Kellogg, E. W. 




Smith, H. J. 


Liggett 




Stagg 


Mackall 




Stickney 


McCarthy 




Stromberg 


McClure, J. C. 




Vauclain 


McMillan, A. 







JOURNALISM AND EDITORIAL, 9 
Bartram Gait 

Brown, B. W. Glass 

Eells Simmons 

Fish Talbott 

Froelick 



PUBLISHING, 6 



Ambrose, H. W. 

Bliss 

DeVinne 



Eppley 
Langmann 
Munn, O. D. 



74 



ADVERTISING, 6 
Balmer McGiffert 

Kline Presbrey 

Macpherson, J. F. Sullivan 





MINING, 9 




Bard 
Byram 

Etherington 
Fleming, B., Jr 
Hardy 




Munn, J. R. 
Robinson 
Swan 
Taplin 




REAL ESTATE, 


8 


Adams, LeB. 
Banigan 
Brasher 
Burleigh 




Edwards, D. 
McKee 
Moore 
Tarbell 


LUMBER INDUSTRIES, 6 


Cecil 

Douglas, R. 
Dutcher 


FARMING, 4 


Goodman 
Nash 
Van Metre 


Anders 
Churchman 




Hatch 
Kirkpatrick 


MISCELLANEOUS BUSINESS, i 


Nason 







PRACTICING LAWYERS, 4 
Crothers Ryan 

Furst Walker 

POLITICAL, I 
Freeman, W. C. 

CONTRACTING, i 

Veit 

MISCELLANEOUS, 51 

PREACHER, I 
Bonner 

UNITED STATES NAVY, i 
Walsh 

75 



THE TEACHERS, 14 



Archer 

Barnes 

Davison 

DeTurck 

Gilmore 

Hoag 

MacKimmie 



McPherson, O. H. 

Ormond 

Rebert 

Rue 

Stewart 

Wilson 

Yoder 



UNEMPLOYED (AT LAST REPORT), 8 
Bates Graham, G. 

Bergner McCallum 

Coyle Odell 

Daily Simons, G. S. 

OCCUPATIONS NOT REPORTED, 27 



Ackley 

Alden 

Brown, E. L. 

Charlock 

Davis, J. E. 

Franklin 

Gehrkin 

Goodens 

Goodrich 

Hasbrouck 

Hoagland 

Holbrook 

Irwin 

James 



Jones, J. R. 

McClure, A. 

McCutcheon 

McMillan, F. C. 

McNaughton 

Messier 

Nicholls 

O'Brien 

Phillips, MacN. A. 

Righter 

Townsend 

Waller 

Zeiss 



75 



The Students, 97 

STUDENTS OF LAW, 54 



NEW YORK LAW SCHOOL, 17 

Baiter Perry 

Beaty Quintard 

Cross Reid 

Cunningham, W. W. Shipman 

Fairing Simons, F. P 

Gopsill Stockton 

Hinds Venable 

McEwen Voorhees 
Morris 

HARVARD LAW SCHOOL, 13 

Armstrong Offutt ^ 

Bannwart Pierce 

Berry Pyle 

Brandon Seeley 

Harris Smith, R. W. 

Henshaw Strater 
Macpherson, D. F. 

COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL, s 

Hamilton, S. Pierson 

Hay Stanley 
Maurice 

OTHER SCHOOLS, 7 

Douglas, L. Sunstein 

Hoen Ullman 

Jones, R. H. Wiley 
MacCoy 





OFFICES, 12 




Alexander 




Jack 


Bartholomew 




Jackson 


Black 




Earned 


Bradford 




Neis 


Connolly 




Price 


Hammack 




Stites 



17 



STUDENTS OF MEDICINE, 15 

COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, 7 

Cole Mixsell 

Furman Reed 

Hildreth Tooker 
III 

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, 2 
Cunningham, G. S. Woodward 

JOHNS HOPKINS, 2 
Butler Hegeman 

ELSEWHERE, 4 
Cages Miller, S. 

Greene Worth 

STUDENTS OF ENGINEERING, 9 

ELECTRICAL 

Doane Kerr 

Hayes, M. C. Simpson 

MINING 

Cutler Leslie 

MECHANICAL 
Fleming, S. W., Jr. 

CIVIL 

Brooks Reppert 

STUDENTS OF THEOLOGY, 5 

Calverly McClanahan, N. 

Gerhard McClanahan, P. 

Kallina 

STUDENT OF ARCHITECTURE, i 

Atherton 

GRADUATE STUDENTS, 10 

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 
Cresse Kellogg, R. W. 

Fowler Spohn 

Hopkins Urban 

78 



Orr 






IN PARIS 








Preston, 


T. J., 


Jr. 


IN ITALY 








Howie 






ELSEWHERE 


Vaughan, 


D. 


C. 




BUSINESS COLLEGE, 3 






McKellar 
McClay 






Rollins 







79 



Recapitulation 



The Business Men 207 

Commercial, Manufacturing, Construction, etc 92 

Banking, Brokerage, Insurance 29 

Engineering 31 

Journalism, Editorial, Publishing 15 

Advertising 6 

Mining 9 

Real Estate 8 

Lumber 6 

Farming 4 

Miscellaneous I 

Lawyers 4 

Contracting I 

Political I 

Miscellaneous 51 

Preacher I 

Navy I 

Unemployed 8 

Occupations Not Reported 27 

Teachers 14 

Students 97 

Law 54 

Medicine IS 

Engineering 9 

Theology 5 

Architecture I 

Graduate 10 

Business College 3 

*Total 355 

*This does not include list of men not heard from. 



80 



How 1906 


Encircles 

ALABAMA 


the Globe 


Glass 


ARIZONA 




Johnson* 


ARKANSAS 




Dutcher* 


CALIFORNIA 


Nash 


Barnes* 

Cunningham* 

Hammack 


COLORADO 


Nixon* 
Turner* 


Brownlee 


CONNECTICUT 


Munn* 


Cutler* 
Hatch 


DELAWARE 


Smith, H. J. 


Danby 


FLORIDA 




Ormond* 


GEORGIA 


Wilson* 


Jones, R. H. 


IDAHO 




Byram* 


ILLINOIS 




Balmer 

Bard 

Bokum 

Connell 

Craig* 

Goodman 

Hamilton* 

Hovey* 

Jones, W. A* 




Keith 

Letts 

Macpherson, I. F. 

Oakford 

Orr 

Pettit 

Strom 

UUmann 

Williams 



81 





INDIANA 




Conde 
Haskell* 


IOWA 


Thayer 
Walker 


Cline* 
Ely 

Francke* 
Hill 


KENTUCKY 


Sinclair 
Smith, R. W. 
Spelletich 


Cecil 
Stites 




Vaughan 



MAINE 



Libby 





MARYLAND 




Brown, H. 




Hoen 


Butler* 




Matthai 


Crothers 




Simmons 


Goldsborough 




Stickney 


Hegeman* 




Waggaman 




MASSACHUSETTS 


Atherton* 




Hayes* 


Abbott* 




Henshaw* 


Bannwart 




Macpherson 


Berry* 




Offutt* 


Brandon* 




Pierce* 


Brooks* 




Pyle* 


Doane* 




Reppert* 


Edwards 




Seeley* 


Galvin 




Strater* 


Gerhard 




Taplin 


Harris* 


MICHIGAN 




Dailey 




Jones* 


Durham* 




Wiley* 


Hardy 


MINNESOTA 




Coxe 




Hale 


Edwards 


MISSISSIPPI 


VanMetre* 


Alexander 


MISSOURI 




Gait 




Motter* 


Hayes 




Osborne* 



82 





MONTANA 




Swan 


NEVADA 




Robinson 
Alden* 


NEW JERSEY 


Munn 
Hobbie 


Ambrose, C. A. 




Holden 


Ambrose, H. W. 




Hopkins* 


Anderson 




Hughes 


Armstrong 




Kellogg 


Barr 




Kerr 


Bartram 




Larned 


Bates 




MacDonald* 


Bliss 




Mclntire 


Brown, G. G. 




McLeod 


Burleigh 




McPherson 


Calverly* 




Neis 


Coyle 




Parker 


Cresse 




Petrie* 


Cross 




Potter* 


Davis 




Ralph* 


De Turck* 




Reed 


Drake 




Rue 


Eisele 




Sayre 


Fowler* 




Simons 


Freeman, H. W. 




Shoemaker, I. L. 


Furman 




Shoemaker, L. B. 


Gopsill 




Spohn* 


Graham 




Stagg 


Gray, A. E. N. 




Thompson 


Gray, T. F. N. 




Voorhees 


Hamilton 




Williams 


Hazard 




Worth 


Higbie 




Yoder* 


Hoag 


NEW YORK 




Abbey 




MacKenzie 


Baiter 




Maurice* 


Barry 




McCarthy* 


Bartholomew 




McEwen 


Beaty* 




McGiffert* 


Bird 




McKee 


Bonner 




McKellar* 


Brasher 




McMillan* 


Brunswick 




Miller 


Burton 




Hasbrouck 


Chamberlain 




Mixsell* 


Cloud 




Morris 


Cole* 




Morrison 


DeVinne 




Munn, O. D. 


Dorman 




Nuelle* 



83 



Dykeman 

Eells 

Eppley 

Fish 

Froelick 

Greene 

Greenland 

German 

Hasbrouck 

Hay 

Hildreth 

Hinds 

Howe* 

Hoyt 

111* 

Johnson, H. H. 

Kahler 

Kallina 

Kellogg* 

Kienbusch 

Langmann 

Leslie* 

Luckenbach 



Odell 

Otis 

Perry 

Pierson* 

Pitts 

Presbrey 

Quintard 

Reid 

Richard 

Rollins* 

Schwob 

Simons* 

Stanley* 

Stockton* 

Sullivan 

Talbott 

Tarbell 

Tooker* 

Uptegrove 

Vanderbilt 

Vaughan 

Veit 

Walsh 



NORTH CAROLINA 



Archer 



Brown, B. W. 

Cochran* 

Dages 

Gardiner 

Geiger 

Mathews 



OHIO 



McClenahan, N. D. 
McClenahan, P. H. 
Richardson 
Rodgers 
Whitney 



PENNSYLVANIA 



H.=* 



Anders 

Baker 

Bell 

Bergner 

Bradley 

Brooke 

Brown, A. 

Carothers 

Caskey 

Connolly 

Craig* 

Cunningham 

Durham 

Fleming 

Freeman, W. C. 

Furst 

Gibson 

Gilmore 



MacCoy 

McClay 

McClure 

McCreary 

Miller 

Moore 

Musser 

Oves 

Price 

Rafferty 

Rebert 

Righter 

Schaff 

Scott 

Simpson* 

Smith, _H. D. 

Sunstein 

Trace 



Howie 

Jackson 

Johnson 

Kennedy* 

Kershaw 

Kline 

Liggett 

Lloyd 



Banigan 

Marquis* 



Douglas, L. 
Douglas, R. 



Adams 

MacKall* 
Black 

Darlington* 
Smith, S. M. 
Hoagland 
Kirkpatrick* 
Etherington 



Laird 
MacKimmie 



Davison* 
♦Temporarily. 



Updegraff 

Urban 

Van Zandt* 

Vauclain 

Vetterlein 

Westcott 

Woodward 



RHODE ISLAND 



Bradford* 



SOUTH CAROLINA 



TENNESSEE 

TEXAS 

VIRGINIA 
WASHINGTON 

WEST VIRGINIA 

WISCONSIN 

BRAZIL 

CUBA 

MEXICO 
CANADA 

SYRIA 
85 



McCallum 



Palmer 



Venable 



Fleming 



Nason* 
Ryan* 



Stewart* 



Numerical Distribution 

New York 76 

New Jersey 59 

Pennsylvania 51 

Massachusetts 21 

Illinois 18 

Ohio II 

Maryland 10 

Iowa 7 

California 5 

Michigan 5 

Indiana 4 

Missouri 4 

Minnesota 4 

Connecticut 3 

Kentucky 3 

Tennessee 3 

Virginia, West Virginia, Arkansas, Florida, Rhode Island, Col- 
orado, Texas, Nevada (2 each) 16 

Georgia, Arizona, Kansas, Washington, Alabama, Mississippi, North 
Carolina, Idaho, Delaware, Montana, Wisconsin, Maine, South 

Carolina (i each) 13 

Mexico I 

Brazil I 

Cuba I 

Syria 2 

Canada 4 

Total 322 



86 



Marriages 24 



Harry Varry Bonner Bessie Laney 

August IS, 1906, Altwar, N. Y. 
Francis Mark Brooke Nanna Sturges 

June II, 1907, Scranton, Pa. 
Granville Lindsay Burton Dorothy Bhima Husted 

December 28, 1907, Winthrop Highlands, Mass. 
William Bridgman Churchman, Jr. Katherine NicoU 

November 14, 1907, Trinity Chapel, N. Y. 

Robert Goodwin Craig Celia H. McGuire 

December 31, 1904, Washington, D. C. 

Robert Goodwin Craig, Jr., 

born November 7, 1905, at Chicago, III. 

Harold Sydney Edwards Jettie Theola Wason 

May 25, 1907, Newburyport, Mass. 
John Henry Fitch, Jr. Pearl Bowman Squire 

August 21, 1907, Youngstown, O. 

Brooks Fleming, Jr. Amy J. Dodson 

November 15, 1906, at Columbus, O. 

Wife died February 9, 1907, in Columbus, after 

one month's illness from typhoid. 

Thomas Francis Galvin, Jr. Mary Frances Cleneay 

August 23, 1907, Brookline, Mass. 
William WoodhuU Hay Elizabeth B. Valk 

December 19, 1907, New York City. 
Louis Lee Hayes Mary Lois Kilpatrick 

November 23, 1907, St. Louis, Mo. 
Frederic Luther Kline Leila Ethel Case 

May 25, 1906, New York City. 
Charles Authur Mackenzie Berniece Stewart 

June 12, 1906, New York City. 

Alexander Anderson MacKimmie Jean Ross 

April 6, 1906, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Alexander Anderson MacKimmie, Jr., 

born December 24, 1906, at Truro, Nova Scotia. 

Daniel Francis McCarthy Katharine Penfold Warner 

September 11, 1907, Trenton, N. J. 

87 



George D. McCreary, Jr. Ellen Marnoe Wharton Williams 

June 20, 1906, Philadelphia, Pa. 
George Ross McKee Christine Watson Hayward 

January 15, 1908, New York City. 
Lewis Spencer Morris Emily Pell Coster 

April 6, 1907, New York City. 
Robert Pettit Rachel Hazlehurst 

June 7, 1905, Evanston, 111. 
Paul Barrett Sullivan Louise M. Hetrick 

March 15, 1907, Asbury Park, N. J. 

Addison F. M. Talbott Alice H. McKinney 

April 26, 190S, Buffalo, N. Y. 

Alice Mary Talbott, 

born August 27, 1907, at Buffalo, N. Y. 

Swift Tarbell Virgie Marguerite Whitcomb 

November 28, 1907, at Garden City, L. L 
Ricker Van Metre Louise G. Watkins 

June 19, 1907, St. Paul Minn. 

Thomas Ennalls Waggaman Frances Margaret Fuller 

October 6, 1906, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Thomas Ennalls Waggaman, Jr., 

born July 20, 1907, at Washington, D. C. 



H« 



Midwinter Jollity in New York 

Shave Vanderbilt was a busy and most entertaining toastmaster. 
After outlining the history of the class in facetious vein, from which it 
was plain that no other class existed or ever would which could be so 
blest with riches of ability, the power and the all-around greatness that 
1906 abounds in, he proceeded to elicit the class's praises from its sons 
gathered around the festive board. He was a jolly and ready master 
of ceremonies only there was no ceremony. The tributes of the faithful 
ranged from a good old German song and yodel from Ed 111 to a speech 
from our Statesman Bill Freeman, who had left his legislative duties 
in Harrisburg to come all the way to New York for the dinner. Bill 
gave us a cracking good talk, short and crisp and full of splendid class 
spirit and loyalty. President Samuel Jackson Reid, Jr., started the 
ball rolling with a benign look over the condition of the class. He 
said it certainly looked good to him and then let loose on a fund of 
stories. The secretary told of what some of the absent brothers were 
doing. The fun and jubilee then began. Harry Bliss, Walter Righter, 
Harry Ambrose, Pat Charlock, Ken. McEwen and Silent Ned Larned 
felt moved to spread the good news of the glory of 1906. Julian Beaty 
gave a strong talk on real class spirit and the singular opportunity of 
the younger graduate to help solve the University's problems. Tele- 
grams and letters of greeting were read from Don MacPherson, Deane 
Edwards and Marshall Coxe. 

The disappointment of the dinner was that Hinman Bird, who had 
worked it up and perfected the arrangements was prevented from 
coming. His conscientious work in making the details everything that 
could be wished for, was appreciated by all. 

Everyone voted the dinner a huge success and plans were discussed 
on all sides for the cruise of the good ship 1906 at Princeton next 
spring. Everyone was loathe to leave, but leaving didn't mean going 
home by any means. A policeman whose beat is at 125th Street and 
Riverside Drive told me the next day that at three in the morning he 
heard a noise in the bushes down by the river. As he came closer he 
heard someone whisper, "Look out, here comes Johnny Topley," and 
another "Never mind we'll go down to Renwicks." 

L. D. Froelick. 



Men at Class Dinner at Hotel Astor 



February 8, 1907 



Cole Price 
Ray Williams 
J. J. Petrie 
Ray Richardson 
C. L. Quintard 
H. H. Hi^bie 
E. W. Kellogg 

E. P. Larned 
C. Ross McKee 
N. P. Charlock 
W. Hazard 

J. P. C. Alden 

B. W. Kerr 
R. C. Veit 
S. Hamilton 

F. S. Ackley 
H. R. Mixsell 

G. M. Uptegrove 

C. O. Kienbush 
Ross Holbrook 
A. T. Maurice 
H. W. Langmann 
G. T. German 

A. K. Fowler 
J. B. Beaty 
W. C. Freeman 
H. F. Bliss 
G. Gilbert Brown 
Geo. A. Hopkins 
O. H. Macpherson 
Frank P. Simons 
Marion Eppley 
Gilbert M. Oaves 
E. P. Holden 
C. H. Strater 
Dyer Pearl. Jr. 
John Gehrkin 
C. A. Mackenzie 
J. Eisele 
R. Dorman 
A. Ambrose 
R. Barr 



H. Ambrose 

Seeley 

De Vinne 

Al Glass 

Swift Tarbell 

G. MacDonald 

R. H. Davis 

R. B. Gait 

Fred. Cross 

H. P. Bartram 

Vanderbilt 

Froclick 

F. Rollins 

Gibson 

H. Simons 

Mathai 

Luckenbach 

Reid 

Hinds 

111 

Archer Brown 

McEwen 

McGiffcrt 

Shipman 

W. Abbey 

John Anderson 

Stockton 

Cresse 

F. S. Durham 

H. Fish 

Schwab 

Dailey 

Richards 

Presbrey 

W. N. Righter 

Neis 

O. D. Munn 

Tooker 

Alfred M. McClure, Jr. 

Lewis Morris 



90 



The First Annual Cruise of the Good 
Ship 1906 

The fleet cast anchor in the big Carnegie sea early on the afternoon 
of Friday, June 7, after a year's cruise among the Wall Streeters and 
other savage races. Jolly, rollicking liberty parties immediately began 
to roll ashore and into ye little town of Princeton in small groups. 
They kept coming until well on until the night and early on the morrow. 
But they never went back to the ship until four days later. They had 
fought the "Jolly Roger," they had chased the elusive dollar, but they 
now began to settle to and jes' laugh and holler. And the name of 
these white clad sailor men was 1906. Let Little Bright Eyes of the 
spirit world who watches from the look-out tower of the Library, 
speak of what happened : 

"Yes, they're back again ! And they can't wait a minute to dash 
across the campus to 194 Nassau Street into that tent and one of those 
white sailor suits simultaneously. They won't be happy 'till they get 
a uniform and comfort. Watch that elastic grin spread itself across 
their features, not to come off for four days, as they adjust those sailor 
collars and smile, "Now let's start something." Boom ! Boom ! Hello ! 
What's this? Well, isn't that just like those oldest living graduates? 
A P-rade, — and not one hour in town ! Band not yet arrived, but a bass 
■drum pressed into service and a romping, criss-cross crowd swinging 
through the streets ! I suppose we of the spirit world are in for a 
wild shake-up for four long days. Of course, there's Eisele right up in 
the van. Where else would you expect him, but holding one pole of the 
class banner and trying to carry the other to make sure of his job? 
There are the Westerners, in town early to get their money's worth 
for the long travel. Here comes Coxe from St.Paul, who is claiming 
that in lieu of a class baby to give it to, the cup is his for being the 
first man in a costume. Roger Hinds protests that he has been prac- 
tising for this speed all year, jumping into his trousers and sliding 
down the brass pole on one alarms in the Richmond Hill fire engine 
house. But Jack Nash easily brushes them aside in his claim for the 
empty cup— strange that Jack should want an empty cup ! For was he 
not the only man who was not out of that good sailor suit for an 

91 



instant during his whole reunion stay? But we are casting into the 
future. Back ! 

"Who but one could own that genial parenthesis walk bowling along 
in the p-rade? D. Edwards of St. Paul, that's all, and naturally he has 
the smile to match it. Yo-ho, yo-ho ! All hands, fore and aft, on 
deck to splice the main brace ! Pipe that horn — pipe roll of Skipper 111 
and First Mate Mixsell. They'll have the p-rade sea-sick, if it doesn't 
eat lemons. For they are full of glee — nothing more — now that they 
have finished the design for the flying eight-oared shell, 'The Skibo- 
Snipe,' had water built for it, have it almost ready to launch in the 
Vandeventer creek back of the tent, and have shipped a full comple- 
ment of crew. This is the canny craft, ye must know, that is to win 
the first eight-oared race on Loch Carnegie in the Yale game p-rade 
to-morrow. 

Skipper 111 was almost pugnacious in holding out for the good old 
German type, schooner, as designed for the racer. Even when Mate 
Mixsell insisted that schooners behaved very badly when half-seas over, 
the Skipper would have no alternative but the seidel. What's a reunion 
for, anyhow, beauty or usefulness, he wanted to know? He was for 
usefulness, everytime. So the craft had to be designed while he was 
asleep, in order to get a shell. But he was finally reconciled and did 
lusty service in building it, when he saw that his favorite, schooner, 
was out of the race. Therefore, when the two boatmen, having 
finished their navigation work, together with Carpenter Kerr had put 
up the big, fine tent, had laid the wood floor — both are marvels of 
splendor and the admiration of surrounding classes — they said it is time 
to rest. So they joined the p-rade. 

"But why this sudden, scurrying break-up of the march? They are 
running in all directions? They're climbing telegraph poles? They 
swarm into Blair tower. Here come some up into my tower ! I must 

go." 

And the nimble spirit skipped over to the belfry of Nassau Hall. 

"They have telescopes ! They see a train, coming in, and a figure on 
it. It is large as of ye old fooball warrior. He is seated — what ! 
great Heavens ! — on the roof of the locomotive cab. And he is waving- 
his arms, up and down, like a bird. Does he think he is flying or 
running a milk train? As the train approaches, the figure grows bigger, 
bolder, it is French of features, and is no other than — you've guessed 
it, — Rafferty. So, is the reunion safe. Nothing worse than the Battle 
of Princeton, an explosion, or the burning of the village can happen 
now. The Great Calm is in town. And the p-rade moves on, all 
wreathed in Big Tim Sullivan chowder party smiles — all but 111, in 
whose German blood there is no Sullivan smile. 

"A varied program for the rest of the afternoon runs — arrival of 

92 



bankers and brokers, more p-rades, adjournment to tent for suits, 
let's p-rade some more, coming of a big party — Charlock — and less 
p-rading for a time, more adjournments to tent, then p-rading some 
more. General Reid, in command, has Ml machinery, tent and forces, 
the like, oiled in clock like order by this time ready for the 
formal, quiet opening exercises of the evening. 

"Enter Harry Ambrose at evening session with negro trio in tow to 
make music all the night long. He had tried their voices against a 
cyclone and found them valiant. Enter the mob, regiments of the 
uninvited. They sing (?) Lost, irrevocably — three negroes' voices, 
wheezed away. The piano shows signs of weariness. Kindly visitor is 
touched with compassion. 'Needs r'freshment.' And refreshment 
it gets, pitchers of it. It, too, wheezes and dies. Reinforcements of 
negro melodists hustled in from the highways and hedges by Leader 
Ambrose, who fears a quiet reunion, get a good start but nothing can 
last against multitudes of bawling toned gay young Sophomores and 
proud new Juniors, who naturally require entertainment before all 
others and who furnish it on half a chance. 

" 'A deucedly quiet evening,' Tut Walker is barely heard to call across 
a seething mass of bawling humanity. 

" 'Appallingly slow,' volunteers Jack Nash, who has been cultivating 
a nicety of expression out among the lumber men of Forrest City, Ark. 
"There go the scouting parties in p-rade early Saturday morning, 
hunting for the band. Poor band, 'tis well thy tribulations are veiled in 
the curtain of the future ! Leaders beyond compare await to devour thy 
brazen strains, run dry thy supple throats, and pump out thy final 
vestige of wind. Besides Ambrose, stern of command, Voorhees, 
ready in suggestion. 111 who loves a German band, there are the false 
leaders. Potter, the inexorable music-master, and Venable, really a 
guardsman with the young Prince of Asturias. Even our dignified 
President Reid once in a while doth take a prod into the fat sides of the 
music blowers. They come, come the band, they went, they pray 
never to come again. Through the streets of Princeton town, into the 
tent of great renown, over the paths of campus green, empty of 
wind, full of spleen, tramps the band, with a laughing, joyous mob 
behind, and Potter with a small cane shaken ominously in front of the 
note manufacturers. 

"'How long, how long?' wails the Deutche leader. We haf not aller 
times the wind got.' 

"'Popularity,' demands merciless Potter. Now 'Popularity' is the 
best march on tap. 

" 'But, der wind ' 

" 'You're "Popularity" itself,' from the unmoved Potter. 'Let 'er go.' 
"And once more there is joy in the ranks behind, which have filled 

93 



up by noon, with about 150 of the class in line. The big p-rade is 
moving to the Field. Potter dangles an old fish on the end of a long 
line and pole he has picked up in front of the noses of the band. The 
trusty shell, 'Skibo-Snipe,' awaits at the Field. Coxswain Voorhees, 
a mere featherweight in his two hundred pounds of fat, nimbly flops 
into the stern seat, while the mighty stroke Rafferty looks critically 
over his men. And then does Coxswain Voorhees speak : 

" 'Ye men of brawn, you are looking fit for this great trial. In 
academic language, be ye strong and worthy, and none of your damn 
fooling. We'll die for dear old Rut — 1906.' 

"Whereupon crew, Bokum, 111, Mixsell, Waller, O'Brien, Nash, 
Rafferty, Ambrose and Voorhees fall upon each others' necks and 
weep, then clamber aboard. 'Mid the cheers of the class and with 
Potter casting for trout from the bow of the shell. Stroke Rafferty sets 
out a killing pace. But such fearful strain is bound to tell. As the valiant 
crew sweeps across the Grand Stand line a winner by three lengths 
ahead of itself, the Stroke with Waller, 111, and Coxswain Voorhees, 
whose extraordinary efforts at blowing orders through a horn have 
exhausted him, fall in dead faint. 

"The booming of cannons arouse them, heralding the birth of the 
young Prince of Asturias, heir to the Spanish throne. The Prince's 
own artillery is there with him, Venable in command, Orson Munn. 
gunner; Eppley, gunner's mate; Perry and Macdonald, cannon carriers, 
and Schwob presenter of the baby to the Grand Stand. The young 
Prince catches sight of the transparency of the class, 'We have no 

Class Baby yet, But ' followed by that other, 'We are offering pink 

trading stamps for one.' He smiles. 

" 'Commendable enthusiasm,' he whispers in perfect English to his 
Spanish nurse-maid, Schwob. 

"Then see 1906 hustle to get hold of those very choice seats 
allotted them out two miles sou'-west o' center-field, a niche of vantage 
whither in such small affairs as strike and balls, hits and errors find 
their way out to be bothered with, only the final general news that 
another Yale team has fallen and that the doughty Cooney and his 
men, with the Big One Heyniger and Earnest Eddie Humble Harlan 
have turned what seems to be a rather easy trick for them. Hits and 
errors, no one knows; runs, a few remember; but p-rades, everybody 
is on. Another championship, a bonfire Tuesday night, supreme joy, 
can more be said? Nothing. 

"There go the immigration exclusion laws on underclassmen into 
effect at the evening family party in the tent. Chief Master at Arms 
Shave Vanderbilt is feeling his old time Freshman year rough and 
tumble fighting spirit. When soon he spies a brave new Junior 
crawling in under the tent, there is a rush as of many winds. Proud 

94 



'erstwhile Sophomore shoots as of the'' speed of rapid cannon ball from 
out of yawning mouth of unreceptive tent. In beauteous curves, he 
^fvirled and on Earth's floor outside he sprawled and swore, though 
Shave, quite soon forgetting him, was busy with some more. Harry 
Bliss about this time is anxious to recite "Casey at the Bat." But 
Pat Charlock holds that he has a lot more of his own entertainment 
for the crowd up his sleeve and that there will be no time for it if 
Harry springs 'Casey.' So Harry sorrowfully comforts himself in the 
thought that he had at least done one thing to entertain the class in 
writing that transparency for the p-rade, 'Not a man indicted, not a 
member of the Ananias Club, not a Nature Faker in the Class.' 

"Well, the Campbells are coming led by big Jack Roe and though 
the ten bonny Scotsmen, brawny of legs, natty of kilt, rakish of hat, 
and long on wind, were brought to Princeton to entertain the Class 
of 1882, they like 1906 so well that they spend much time, bagpiping, 
singing and dancing in the tent. But of their entertainment Monday 
night is the special. Suffice it to say that when S. Jackson Reid, Amos 
Hoagland and others hear the bagpipe strains, they immediately decide 
to set up a claim for the head of a clan in the old country. 

"Who are these three of Sir Thomas Lipton countenance at the 
Class Dinner in the tent on Sunday night? The cup hunters, eh? 
Verily, but not for the Class Cup, only the long distance travel one. 
Alfred Black from Bellingham, Washington; Bud Johnson from Los 
Angeles, California, and Kenneth Barnes from San Francisco, Califor- 
nia, are trying to look as if they love each other. Alfred Black is 
awarded the cup before the close of the reunion. He had been studying 
the law of the question out in Washington State all the year, and 
who would dare dispute his claim after that? The dinner over ,our 
worthy President speaks for good class spirit all the time, the kind 
that makes an informal reunion as big a drawing card as a large one. 
Hinman Bird had been forced to go back to New York to open the 
stock market Monday morning so some one else tells of the great work 
he has done with the assistance chiefly of Shave Vanderbilt in collecting 
about $1,600 for the Memorial Fund in the first year out of college. 
This is taken as a record among Memorial Fund achievements in all the 
classes. 

"Here we are again with the Kilties and they're the whole show this 
Monday night. Who could beat the bass drum with more artistic 
science than yon big Scot, twirling the stick in myriad whirls behind his 
back before he bangs the drum? And when it comes to a Highland 
fling with a piping accompaniment there's not a bonny Scot in the 
land that can beat these men. Then there is "Loch Lomond" sung by 
David Chrisholm and the chorus from ten mighty throats. Meanwhile 
tales of the Boer War are delighting so much, that Deacon Quintard 
thinks seriously of adopting one of the men as his body-guard. 

95 



i 



"Mills '04 and a crowd of his are trying to engineer a desertion by- 
endeavoring to make the Scotsmen believe that the 1904 tent is much 
more congenial than the 1906. With great shouting they march off vi^ith 
two of the Kilties who are too polite to refuse and a handful of others. 
Boss Reid wants to stop their going by force. He would meet J. R. 
De Witt in mortal combat, if necessary, he declares. But it isn't 
necessary. Mills' party causes no difference whatever. The joy goes on 
undiminished until Boss Reid has had the lights turned out for the 
last time and has ordered the tent down in the morning. 

"About sixty of the jolly tars are present at the alumni luncheon on 
Tuesday, and circle the baseball fire that evening. The Old Guard are 
still on hand Wednesday to see that the diplomas are handed out 
aright and to watch the trimming of Pennsylvania. Then do the sailors 
re-embark for another cruise, carrying provisions and coal enough for 
fast steaming and good going among unknown lands from one reunion, 
well managed and successful, to the next for some a year and others 
two years away. 

L. D. Froelick. 



MEN AT THE REUNION 

Some of those at the reunion were : 
Abbey, Alden, Ackley, Alexander, C. A. Ambrose, H. W. Ambrose, 
Armstrong, Atherton, Baiter, Barnes, Barr, Bartram, Beaty, Bird, Black, 
Bliss, Bokum, Bradford, Burton, Brooke, A. Brown, B. Brown, G. G. 
Bsown, H. Brown, Butler, Calverley, Carothers, Caskey, Chamberlain, 
Charlock, Churchman, Cresse, Cross, Cutler, Coxe, Coyle, A. Craig, 
Dages, Danby, R. F. Davis, De Vinne, Doane, Dorman, Drake, F. S. 
Durham, J. C. Durham, Dykeman, D. Edwards, Eisele, Eppley, Fish, 
Fleming, Fowler, Franklin, W. C. Freeman, Froelick, Gardiner, Gerhard, 
German, Gibson, Glass, Goldsborough, Goodeno, Graham, A. Gray, 
Greenland, S. Hamilton, Hasbrouck, Haskell, Hardy, M. Hayes, Hazard, 
Hay, Hegeman, Higbie, Hinds, Hoagland, Holden, Hopkins, 111, S. 
Johnson, E. W. Kellogg, Kerr, Kienbusch, Larned, Lloyd, Luckenbach, 
MacCoy, Messier, Macdonald, Matthai, Maurice, McCarthy, McCreary, 
McEwen, McKellar, McGiffert, McLeod, A. McMillan, F. C. McMillan, 
Mixsell, Moore, O. D. Munn, Nash, O'Brien, Ormond, Otis, Palmer, 
Parker, Pearl, Preston, Perry, Petrie, Pierce, Price, Potter, Quintard, 
Rafferty, Reed, Reppert, Reid, Richard, Rollins, Schaff, Scott, Schwob, 
Shipman, Simmons, Simons, Simpson, H. D. Smith, Stanley, Stockton, 
Thompson, Tooker, Trace, Updegraff, Uptegrove, Vanderbilt, Vauclain, 
Vaughan, Veit, Vetterlein, Venable, Voorhees, Waggaman, Waller, 
Walker, Westcott, R. S. Williams, Wisner, Worth. 

96 



Financial 

Louis D. Froelick, Secretary, in account with the Class of 1906, in 

matter of Secretary's Fund: 
Dr. 

From Qass Day Committee $471-99 

Return of Over- Payment, Alumni Catalogue .50 

Interest, July i, 1906, to July i, 1907, on Secretary's Fund 
Deposit, First National Bank, Princeton 12.39 



Cr. 

Printing and Postage $78.45 

Stationery and Filing System 20.33 

Graduate Catalogue 2.00 

Flowers 13.00 

$113.78 

Receipts $484.88 

Disbursements $1 13.78 

Balance, October 3, 1907 $37i.io 



COMMENCEMENT ACCOUNT. 

Louis D. Froelick in account with the Class of 1906. 
Dr. 
Credit on note for $50 at 6 per cent for four months, 

with the First National Bank, Princeton $49.00 

Assessments, 258 at $15.25, O. De G. Vanderbilt, Jr 3,935.05 

Cannon Seat Receipts, J. R. Munn 221.00 

Class Buttons, D. Edwards lOi-OS 

Invitations, extra, T. H. Atherton, Jr 36.20 

1908 Dance Committee, part payment 7th Regt. Band 200.00 

Total $4,542.30 

97 



Cr. 

Typewriting, Printing .Postage, Incidentals $133-96 

Invitations and Programs 560.00 

Seventh Regiment Band, Commencement 710.00 

Senior P-rade and St. Patrick's Day Bands 59-50 

Nassau Herald Appropriation 450.00 

Payment of Note, First National Bank 50.OO 

Class Buttons 259.25 

C. V. Gulick, Freshman Team Deficit 62.68 

Carpentering, Wiring, Policing 240.50 

Tobacco, Parasols, Ivy and Cannon Exercises Expenses.. 189.59 

Watch Fobs, Class Day Committee 400.00 

Class Dinner, Rental Casino 379-83 

Cannon Seats, One-Fifth of Principal and Interest on Loan 

for Erection 575-00 

Total $4,070.31 

Receipts $4,542-30 

Disbursements $4,070.31 

Balance to L. D. Froelick, Secretary $471-99 



98 



Gleanings from the Letter File 

Bellingham, Wash. 
Dear Lou : 

The cup arrived safely and has been much admired. I was going to 
put it in my room, but the family yelled "tight wad" and put it down 
where everyone could enjoy it. Needless to say, when I drink to the 
health of all the members of the class in turn with it, I have to do it on 
the installment plan and have a stiff job at that. The only thing I don't 
quite like about it is a feeling that as I didn't have to exert myself as 
hard to get to reunion as some who traveled a shorter distance, I don't 
deserve the honor. All that was required of me was to say yes when 
asked if I cared to make the trip. I wish some system could be devised 
to give a cup to the man who expended the greatest effort to get to 
reunions. 

Some old grads had quite a little fun with me before I left for the 
West, by congratulating me on winning the class cup. As they made 
the mistake of thinking I got it for the class boy, and as there was a 
bunch of girls present, it didn't take them long to put me up in the air. 
I reckon I'm out of the running for that cup though, as I haven't to my 
knowledge even hove in sight of my soul's affinity as yet. While I'm 
in the grateful mood I suppose I ought to tell of a great reform the 
class partially brought about in me, of which the following is typical. 
On the night of my arrival home from the East I showed up at the 
dinner table in a dress suit, my hair parted in the middle and slicked 
down and with a monocle in my right lamp. The fact of my living in 
the wild and wooly West and a brief reference to the "Hall of Fame" 
in the '06 Nassau Herald will explain the strangeness of the scene. 
Guess I '11 stop my prattle now and not burden you further, except to 
ask you to please thank most heartily for me all my old class mates 
you see for the momento they presented me with. I hereby announce 
that I'm a candidate for any similar glory that may exist in 191 1 if not 
sooner. 

Like yourself a venerable Old Grad, I am, 

Alfred L. Black, Jr. 

P. S. Don't think that because you asked me to write this for the 
year book, that I'll get mad if you don't put it in. Cut out any portions 
you may see fit, polish up the language or chuck it in the waste basket, 
but for the Lord's sake don't put it in a gold frame. 

99 



Dear Shave: 

As I once had the pleasure of looking into the horoscope of the 
Class of 1906, you have suggested — I won't say kindly — that I write a 
few words for the Annual Record on whether the class has been turning 
out according to specifications. But to discuss all the glorious achieve- 
ments of our class since graduation would, I'm afraid, require many 
volumes in itself. Perish the thought that I should undertake the task. 
I am, however, in a particularly good position to study the careers of 
one portion of our class — our legal representatives — and, since so many 
of our number have chosen that profession, a brief insight into what 
they are doing may prove interesting. 

The first name which suggests itself is naturally that of our President, 
Samuel Jackson Reid. Sam went into an office last spring and, as I 
had heard constant reports during the summer that his name was 
already a slogan in the legal world, I dropped one day into his palatial 
office in Wall Street, expecting to find a line of clients stretching out 
into the street. But such was not the case. I was met on the 
threshold by a prosperous-looking clerk who inquired my business. I 
said : "I want to see Mr. Reid." His face was a blank. I raised my 
voice, I said : "I want to see Mr. Samuel Reid." His expression 
became vacuous. I fairly shouted. I said : "I want to see Mr. Samuel 
Jackson Reid of Brooklyn, L. I. This is where he works . Haven't 
you ever heard of him?" "Oh," said he. "You mean that little fellow 
who talks so much. You'll find him in the next room." How are the 
mighty fallen ! I did find him in the next room. He was copying a city 
ordinance. He told me he thought the Law was a great profession 
because it required so much intelligence. 

Now Vip Voorhees knows better how to do it. I had occasion this 
summer to run down to dear old New Brunswick for a brief visit and 
after finishing what I had to do, I decided to look Vip up. Here, too, 
I was met at the threshold by a pompous-looking clerk. But when I 
mentioned Vip's name he became all deference. Do you wish a 
divorce?" he whispered confidentially. I shook my head. "I merely 
asked," he explained, "Because Mr. Voorhees is so busy that he lets the 
younger men look after the small details." He then showed me to a 
seat and told me he would let me know when Mr. Voorhees was at 
leisure. Later I was ushered into the Sanctum and found Vip reading 
what he told me was the New Jersey Law Journal. Later I discovered 
it to be the Police Gazette. 

With the career of Al Maurice, too, another of our eminent 
Barristers at Law, I am well acquainted, since we happen to attend the 
same institution of learning. Al is already a man of mark. He acquired 
fame there recently by his clever and original argument that the Board 
of Public Utilities should control the price of drinks. He says all the 



saloon keepers give rebates to Pete Tooker. Al believes that his best 
asset in the profession is his Princeton track work which will come in 
handily when chasing the elusive ambulance. 

Then there is Rope Hinds, another aspirant of the woolsack. If there 
ever was a man fitted by nature to be a lawyer, it's Roger Hinds. He 
can argue on either side of any question whether he knows anything 
about it or not. Like the man who had neither hands or feet and yet 
was a past master in the violin-playing entirely by ear — Roger knows 
the law intuitively and requires no law books. 

As to Bub Stockton and Judge Shipman, they already have made 
rapid strides toward success. Bub, it is rumored, has been retained at 
a yearly salary to keep Harry Bliss out of trouble and, if he does it, he 
will earn his money. The Judge meanwhile has cinched his appointment 
to the bench by becoming a Democrat and voting the Tammany ticket. 

Of our Harvard delegation, Pop Seeley, Mac Pyle, But Brandon, 
Don Macpherson, Helm Strater, By Pierce, A. W. Bannwart, etc., I 
scarcely like to speak. What an array of names and yet what sad, what 
lamentable rumors reach us from the vicinity of fair Harvard. I 
hesitate to pen the words ***** [that the rest of this paragraph 
was not fit to print may be gathered from the following sentence which 
we quote "In an examination on the code of Social Procedure held 
last June at eight o'clock in the evening, But Brandon received a fifth 
group because he failed to attend in evening dress."] 

I must not take up any more space, however, in cataloguing the legal 
achievements of 1906. And yet what few names have been mentioned. 
I might tell how Ned Stanley has broken loose since he left college ; how 
Bunt Venable was seen working fifteen consecutive minutes one day 
last September; how Hank Walker is running Indiana, etc., etc., etc. 
But I will spare you. Hoping you will publish these few words, but 
urging you not to. I remain, 

Very sincerely yours, 

Sinclair Hamilton. 

New York, Nov. 25, 1907. 
Dear Shave: 

When I promised you I would write a dissertation on "Social Life 
at New York Law School" if I couldn't get anyone else to do it, I had 
no idea that the other members of the class who are there would be 
so bashful about rushing into print. I first approached Ollie Perry 
with your request. I regarded him as an eminent authority on the 
social life at the school, for a year ago when the political pot was boil- 
ing over class elections, Ollie, with his usual sagacity and foresight, 
espoused the cause of the winning side, with the result that when the 
newly elected president distributed the spoils of office, Ollie was 

lOI 



appointed chairman of the banquet committee. Everyone believes that 
the banquet would have been a great success, had it not been for the 
fire which partly wrecked Shanley's the night before the banquet was to 
have been held. Since when the committee has met every two weeks 
to pass resolutions postponing the banquet indefinitely. However, inti- 
mate as is Ollie's knowledge of things social at the law school, he 
refused to write a letter. You may remember that it was a letter of his 
in our Nassau Herald which gave that book such a circulation that it 
became one of the six best sellers among the Princeton publications, 
and was read with almost as much enthusiasm as the Nassau Lit. Ever 
since Ollie has confined his correspondence to illustrated postal cards ; 
and whenever a member of his family inquires about the Nassau 
Herald and expresses a wish to see one, Ollie deftly changes the sub- 
ject. Yet he reminded me that he was not unwilling to entertain the 
class should occasion offer ; remarked that he would make a speech or 
sing a song, — but no more letters. When he referred to his willingness 
to make a speech or sing a song I recalled that he had delighted a 
large audience at the Yale Club one evening with a thrilling description 
of the soccer game in which he kicked the first goal ever scored by a 
Princeton soccer team; and later sang our class ode from the steps 
of the club. It was snowing at the time, so when Ollie melodiously 
proclaimed that "the breath of Spring is o'er the land," a member of 
the Harvard Club, across the street, paled at what he termed a 
"hideous anachronism." So I waylaid Sam Reid, and put the propo- 
sition to him. Sam was asked to coach the baseball team at the Law 
School, so is in touch with the athletic life there, as well as the social. 
But in his terse fashion Sam remarked that it seemed rather foolish 
for him to write you a letter in view of the fact that he spent a large 
portion of his time in your office, ostensibly dictating to your stenog- 
rapher. Ned Venable would have been just the one to write this, but 
the lure of gold and the excitement of a business career enticed him 
from our ranks at the end of last year. And I owe Judge Shipman 
some money, so didn't dare ask him. Now you have my apology for 
attempting this myself. 

I might say that a man who takes his orders from a fourteen-year- 
old office boy,— and a law office boy at that,— hasn't the proper perspec- 
tive in matters social; so I must dodge answering your questions 
regarding "Social Life in New York Law School." I suppose there is 
such a thing,— or Bob Stockton wouldn't be there. Anyhow, you'll hear 
about "Social Life" from the fellows at Harvard and Columbia Law 
Schools. Al Maurice is at the latter, and quite often tells us about the 
last tea he attended at Earl Hall, which I understand is Murray Dodge 
at Columbia. It seems strange that a man with Al's lurid past would 
have the temerity to do such a thing, but he says he has bribed Hop 

102 



Fierson to keep mum, and feels reasonably safe in consequence. So 

1 guess that you'll have enough letters about social life without an 
attempt from me. 

With best regards to Miss Perrier, 

Sincerely yours, 

ICenneth M. McEwen. 

New Brunswick, N. J., November 28, 1907. 
Dear Shave: 

You are to be congratulated upon the excellent manner in which you 
are conducting our Class News column ,in the Alumni Weekly. I follow 
our personals, so to speak, very closely each week and it is a constant 
source of gratification to see the great quantity that we have in. This 
means a great deal to those of us who are separated by many miles, and 
who are unable to come in contact with many of the class. Keep up the 
good work. 

Did you attend the Fall Regatta at Princeton? Lake Carnegie 
must have presented a wonderfully beautiful scene. The race called to 
my mind our own class crew — of which I was coxswain, I speak in all 
modesty — Rafiferty was our stroke, Al. O'Brien No. i, Tub Waller No. 

2 ,and many others. Do you remember Old Raff and how gallantly he 
stroked us to a finish? How he never became discouraged, and how, 
when his oar snapped in twain, his spirits never failed. Had Mr. 
Carnegie beheld such a picture, he would feel thrice rewarded that 
he has given Princeton a beautiful lake, upon which we may be able 
to turn out crews, well drilled in the knowledge of aquatics. Our crew 
was crude in the extreme and only a living example of spirit. 

I am glad to see that many of us have taken up the yoke of matri- 
mony — Hinman says "not for me" — he will get caught yet ; I know sev- 
eral girls with nets out for him. While on this interesting subject I 
wish to ask you, Mr. Secretary, whether we have a Class Boy? If 
we haven't, it seems a shame; we must get busy so that Pitcher 
Heyniger may receive the baseball from an offspring of oue of our 
classmates. 

How about our class mid-winter dinner? Kindly inform me the date, 
if fixed. I think it is an excellent idea to have it in Tiger-town. There 
is no reason why it should not be a good one — that is, if we can get a 
good many back to it. It is an opportune time at which to see each 
other and there is no place where we feel more at home than at 
Princeton. 

My history since graduation has been without interest. I am single 
(this contrary to the expectations of a few) and studying law. I am 
a resident in good standing, strange as it may seem, of the City of New 
Brunswick. 

103 



With best wishes to you in your duties of Secretary and in the hopes 
that "the people" may take to Perrier as a duck to water, I remain, 

Your sincere friend. 

ViP. 

The Chairman of the Class Memorial Fund publishes the following 
letter but begs to state that like the "Princetonian" he is not responsible 
for the sentiments expressed (though he added two notes). The letter 
was not marked "Personal" so he takes the liberty of reproducing it 
here. 

Cambridge, May 15, 1907, 
Dear Hinman: 

You have added somewhat to the unhappiness of a life already 
destitute of much joy, by your almost relentless pursuit of me during 
the past winter months. 

As I have been eking out my little pleasures (note — tell us in another 
letter Don. what these are!) ; occasional at best: Now listening to the 
glowing words of some returned pilgrim from Princeton; now with 
fever eye skimming a too short missive from some devoted classmate ; 
one sad discordant note has burdened the whole refrain : hearing which 

"A melancholy tear affects my eye, 
And my heart has labored with a sigh." 

to wit: "Bird told me to tell you that you owe him ten dollars for the 
Memorial Fund and for God's sake to pay it !" 

Enclosed please find it. I should prefer to have it devoted to placing 
deodorizers in the "cabinets d'aisances" (Note — Don is very Frenchy) 
of our new entry. 

We are working hard at the Harvard Law School and have just had 
what we hope is our last fall of snow ; but this is an odd place and 
you can never tell when you may get a frost. 
Come up to the Princeton-Harvard ball game 

"And in thy right hand lead with thee 
Sweet Perrier! (Vanderbilt's water). 
The muse is good to me to-night, Hinman. 

As ever, 

Don MacPherson. 

My dear Classmates: 

A year and a half is not a period of sufficient length to contain great 
experience for a starter in the great Game. And my letter for our first 
Class Book will consequently not contain an extensive or, I am afraid, 

104 



a very interesting story. But it will be a story of contrast— of how 
I left a work of great fascination to take up a vocation which, while 
diametrically opposite, holds for me still greater interest. 

Shortly after our graduation I started in Wall Street, soon learning 
the taste of the dirty work in a big bond-house; where a college grad- 
uate is no more respected for his "learning" than the ordinary messen- 
ger boy, with his mind full of "Diamond Dick." But gradually the 
business presented itself to me with all its great interest, and I began to 
get an insight into what it all meant and to realize what a "cinch" it 
was — for the man on top. After three months of the "runner" job I 
had the satisfaction — which we experienced in Sophomore year — 
of being able to look on those below us as well as those above. It was 
a great life — full of new experiences, discouragements, and hopes — and 
I put in nine of the happiest, as well as the busiest months that I shall 
perhaps ever know, studying human nature as well as finance. 

In March, however, I saw my way clear to fufill a hope which I 
had had long before I entered college, but which I had abandoned in 
Junior year. It was hard to leave Wall Street, where my interest was 
centered and where the work appealed to me so very strongly, but 
I am sure there was but one thing which could have turned me from 
it; and that was the ministry, in the preparation for which I am now 
engaged. I put in the six months from March to the end of August 
on the books, tutoring and making up the work of the first year in 
the Seminary, which I had missed. In September I entered the 
Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge — and here I am now, burn- 
ing the midnight oil as it was never burned in 8 E. M, Witherspoon, 
except as a beacon to guide "Shave" Vanderbilt to his bed. 

I expect to be here two years, and, while it is a far cry from Cam- 
brige to Princeton — in more ways than one — there is great satisfaction 
in having so many members of the class, and other Princetonians, 
near-by. We get together occasionally for reunions on a small scale, 
and so are able to carry forward the friendships of those four years, 
the events of which always furnish the topic of conversation for our 
meetings. Our addresses, found in the Class Book, are for the use of 
all members of the class who get within hailing distance of Cambridge, 
or who have the time and inclination to drop us a line about themselves. 

Your friend and classmate, 

E. Ashley Gerhard. 



105 



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